When
                      I think of Finzi’s 
Dies Natalis my reference version
                      is Wilfred Brown’s fine recording with the composer’s son
                      conducting. But this recording is getting on a bit now
                      and it is natural that people might want one recorded more
                      recently. Now two have appeared almost simultaneously.
                  
                   
                  
                  
Toby
                      Spence’s recording with the Scottish Ensemble has just
                      appeared on the Wigmore Hall Live label and this disc has
                      appeared from Naxos.
                   
                  
As
                      the label suggests, the Wigmore Hall Live recording is
                      a transcription of a concert given by Spence and the Scottish
                      Ensemble. It couples the Finzi work with Walton’s Sonata
                      for Strings and Finzi’s Romance, Op. 11, whereas Gilchrist
                      and Hill give us a complete recital of works by Finzi.
                      They have already issued a disc containing 
For St. Cecilia and 
Intimations
                      of Immortality on Naxos (see 
                      review) so this disc is starting to look like the second
                      in a series. 
                   
                  
Finzi
                      seems to have taken considerable time completing works. 
Dies
                      Natalis itself had a gestation period of nearly twenty
                      years. Sometimes works never materialised; this is the
                      case with his orchestral triptych 
The Bud, The Blossom
                      and The Berry, which was to be on the subject
                      of the seasons. The 
Bud movement eventually became
                      the 
Prelude for String Orchestra having
                      passed through piano-duet form en-route. Similarly the 
Berry movement
                      was turned into a piano duet and about a third of it was
                      orchestrated. This orchestration was completed after Finzi’s
                      death by his friend and musical executor Howard Ferguson
                      and then became 
The Fall of the Leaf (
Elegy). 
                   
                  
Both
                      these works started out in the 1920s and in 1928 Finzi
                      also completed his 
Two Sonnets, setting John
                      Milton. After the premiere, where the solo part was sung
                      by Steuart Wilson, Finzi was taken to task for setting
                      words which defied setting. He replied robustly, but I
                      can see the critic’s point of view; there is something
                      so extremely wordy about the Milton. Luckily Gilchrist’s
                      mellifluous tone and Finzi’s lovely music go a long way
                      towards making things acceptable. Sorry if I sound less
                      than enthusiastic, but one thing that I found on repeated
                      listening was how Finzi seemed to like setting wordy 17
th century
                      divines, rather than more succinct poets.
                   
                  
Nocturne (
New Year’s Music) also dates from the 1920s but was revised
                      in the 1940s. It was inspired by Charles Lamb’s 
New
                      Year’s Eve essay and Robert Bridges’ poem 
Noel:
                      Christmas Eve 1913. The mood reflects Lamb’s 
sober
                      sadness; Hill and the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra
                      capture this spirit of quiet melancholy rather well, with
                      the contrasting livelier mood in the middle section.
                   
                  
Yet
                      more 17
th century poets appear in 
Farewell
                      to Arms. Initially Finzi set a sonnet from George
                      Peele’s 
Polyhymnia but later on found that Ralph
                      Knevet’s poem 
The helmet now shared imagery with
                      it and this became the 
Introduction. The piece is
                      notable for the beautifully expressive and fluid recitative
                      which Finzi created, and the ever-present mood of melancholy
                      arising from the knowledge of the brevity of life. 
                   
                  
But,
                      the major work on this disc is 
Dies Natalis and
                      you will be wondering why I’ve not yet mentioned the performance
                      yet. In many ways Gilchrist, Hill and the Bournemouth orchestra
                      provide a fine performance. Hill has the feel of this music,
                      the performance is admirably fluid and flows beautifully.
                      In concert Gilchrist has a lovely lyric voice and would
                      seem an ideal interpreter, but something seems to have
                      gone wrong. 
                   
                  
In
                      his review of their previous disc, John Steane complained
                      about the way Gilchrist’s voice was too closely recorded.
                      I wondered whether something similar had happened here.
                      Generally the balance with the orchestra is fine but when
                      Gilchrist’s voice goes under pressure at the top we sense
                      a loss of the feeling for the line and a widening of vibrato,
                      a general feeling of stress.
                   
                  
This
                      is a shame because there are many things that are deeply
                      likeable about these performances. Many people will find
                      Gilchrist entirely admirable but I would urge you to find
                      a way to listen before you buy. If you already have a good
                      account of 
Dies Natalis then I would urge you to
                      try this disc because the additional items are well worth
                      the listen. There is far more in Finzi than the two or
                      three works which get recorded regularly.
                   
                  
                  
Robert Hugill
                  
                  see also reviews by Rob
                  Barnett and Michael Cookson
                   
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  Comparative reviews
                  
                  Sonnets
                        and Farewell to Arms: 
Lyrita SRCD237
                  
                  Fall
                        of the Leaf and Prelude: 
Lyrita SRCD239
                  
                  Dies Natalis (Langridge): 
Decca
                  Collection 4762163
                  
                  Dies Natalis (Langridge): 
Decca
                  British Music 4688072