I remember a number of years ago finding a copy 
                  of Peter Jacobs’ Continuum cycle of the ‘complete’ piano works 
                  of Frank Bridge in a second-hand record shop. These were issued 
                  in the early 1990s. I devoured them eagerly and was convinced 
                  at the time that this was the definitive recording. I never 
                  imagined that in my lifetime another two ‘complete’ projects 
                  would be announced. Naxos has, so far, issued a couple of volumes 
                  by Ashley Wass. And then there is the present cycle – now also 
                  onto its second volume. The exciting thing about all these three 
                  editions is that they explore - or promise to explore - the 
                  entire piano repertoire of Frank Bridge. This is a fairly broad-based 
                  spread of music - both in substance and in style. Connoisseurs 
                  of these works will know that there is a huge stylistic and 
                  emotional difference between the great Piano Sonata of 
                  1921 and the Etude Rhapsodique which was written some 
                  sixteen years earlier. Many pianists will have met the Miniature 
                  Pastorals and possibly part of the Miniature Suite 
                  as part of their ‘grades’. But typically I guess that much of 
                  this music is largely unknown to all but a few enthusiasts. 
                
The key to understanding Bridge’s music is to 
                  realise that he had a creative hiatus during and after the Great 
                  War. Although there were still approachable works and even some 
                  ‘salon’ pieces, the general tenor of Bridge’s mature compositions 
                  moved towards boundaries laid down by Bartók and Berg rather 
                  than any British model. In some of his late compositions he 
                  was beginning to experiment with music that is pushing towards 
                  a ‘twelve tone’ synthesis but without ever subscribing to a 
                  particular system. 
                
The disc opens with a convincing performance 
                  of the ‘wartime’ Fairy Tale Suite. This was composed 
                  in September and October 1917. The very titles of this Suite 
                  would appear to be evoking the world of the nursery and of childhood. 
                  However, it is clear to see that they are not actually pieces 
                  composed for children – either to play or to hear. It has been 
                  suggested that Maurice Ravel’s Mother Goose Suite 
                  may well be a model of this nostalgic, but not sentimental, 
                  look at the world of fairy-tale. Yet, with even a cursory hearing, 
                  the listener can surely detect some of the angst that Bridge 
                  was feeling at this time of universal suffering during the Great 
                  War. The suite has four contrasting movements. The first is 
                  a carefree, waltz-like evocation of A Princess possibly 
                  reflecting on the previous evening’s ball. The rather sinister 
                  study of The Ogre, who may or may not be truly evil, 
                  is really the only grotesque and troubled part of this Suite. 
                  The Spell is truly gorgeous: this is a calm and reflective 
                  study that has been likened to the ‘the waving of a wand’. It 
                  is a movement of true beauty and manages to suspend time in 
                  a magical sort of way. The work ends with a kind of ‘happy ever 
                  after’ finale where The Prince is reunited with his beloved 
                  Princess. Bridge must have been very conscious that this ‘happy 
                  ending’ was not the reality for many of his friends at that 
                  time. 
                
Nothing could be in greater contrast to the Fairy 
                  Tale Suite than the next piece – the two-movement In 
                  Autumn. This work was composed after the ground-breaking 
                  and style-changing Piano Sonata. The first of these two 
                  pieces is called Retrospect which inhabits an “elusive 
                  harmonic world” where “the ideas [are] constantly transformed, 
                  but the tormented power [is] unmistakable”. The second movement, 
                  Through the Eaves is a little bit ‘lighter’ in tone – 
                  yet the same despairing mood as the first movement is still 
                  apparent. Perhaps the only flashes of light are the complex 
                  and ever-changing arpeggios that create an “iridescent harmonic” 
                  colouring. For all its despair, this is a beautiful piece of 
                  music. 
                
Unlike the Fairy Tale Suite, the three 
                  sets of Miniature Pastorals were actually written for 
                  children. However, they are in no way patronising or condescending 
                  – either technically or aesthetically. Mark Bebbington plays 
                  the first set here, which has three well balanced movements. 
                  It was composed in 1917. The opening ‘allegretto con moto’ is 
                  really a little march which suggests a little girl dancing to 
                  a pipe tune played by a boy in a tree. The sad little waltz 
                  is meant to intimate that the boy and girl have had a tiff. 
                  And the last movement is full of the wonder of nature: here 
                  is a jig tune that is accompanied by birdsong. 
                
The Etude Rhapsodique is one of my personal 
                  favourites from the corpus of Frank Bridge’s piano music. It 
                  was composed in November 1905 and is really a difficult study 
                  in ‘chromatic colouration’ juxtaposed with a ‘fast descending 
                  semiquaver figure’ which is announced at the beginning of the 
                  work. Yet at the heart of the Etude there is a gorgeous 
                  explosion of a ‘big’ tune or at least ‘phrase’ which has all 
                  the romance of Chopin or Scriabin. The piece remained unpublished 
                  until 1990. 
                
The programme notes suggest the ‘late’ Graziella 
                  (1926) is in fact meant to be a ‘salon’ piece. Yet the reality 
                  is that this work is much more related to the Piano Sonata 
                  than to the more ‘popular’ pieces of the years before the Great 
                  War. It is certainly a convoluted, enigmatic and elusive work 
                  that is quite difficult to pin down. Yet perhaps what we discover 
                  here is a perfect fusion of Bridge’s two main stylistic periods? 
                  On this basis it is possibly a very important piece. 
                
One of the most impressive numbers on this CD 
                  is the Dramatic Fantasia. Interestingly, this work was 
                  composed in 1906, around the time that the composer was successfully 
                  winning prizes in the Cobbett chamber music competitions. Those 
                  works were spelt Phantasies and are still amongst the 
                  best-loved chamber music by Bridge. It is probably fair to say 
                  that the Dramatic Fantasia owes much to the ethos of 
                  the Cobbett works – especially in its formal construction. 
                
Even on first hearing, the listener will be struck 
                  by the late-romantic style. It would be very easy to try to 
                  identify which composers influenced this work. Certainly, there 
                  is comparatively little here that could not have been written 
                  by any composer in the Western world at that time. Yet, that 
                  is by and large beside the point. Bridge handles his material 
                  and his technique with great skill and aplomb. It is a big work, 
                  lasting nearly quarter of an hour, and is full of diverse musical 
                  statements: a huge range of emotional ground is covered. Much 
                  of the sound-world is purely ‘romantic’ in whatever sense of 
                  the word the listener wishes to use it. Some of this music is 
                  quite simply gorgeous. 
                
Frank Bridge gave the holograph copy of this 
                  work to his friend, the pianist Florence Smith. She never got 
                  around to playing and it ended up lying forgotten on a shelf. 
                  It was discovered in the late 1970s and was recognized as the 
                  great work that it is. It was given its first performance by 
                  Peter Jacobs in the summer of 1979. 
                
The Three Pieces for Piano was published 
                  in 1913 and perhaps represent Bridge’s salon music at its most 
                  sophisticated. The first piece is Columbine which is 
                  really a characteristic waltz to which Bridge adds a degree 
                  of exoticism. The Minuet is an early piece - having been 
                  composed in 1901. However, the composer revised this music for 
                  publication. It is rather modern in sound and has been compared 
                  to Ravel. The final Romance is truly lovely. Typically 
                  tender in mood, there are a couple of adroitly-stated climaxes. 
                  It is a well written love-song that is typical of Bridge’s style. 
                
The Sea Idyll was written in 1905 and 
                  was dedicated to the pianist Harold Samuel who premičred it 
                  at the Bechstein Hall. Although I have been unable to locate 
                  a contemporary review, I understand that it was well received 
                  by the public and was published the following year. It is a 
                  true ‘seascape’ that explores a number of the ocean’s moods 
                  – from the flowing tide, the misty mornings and perhaps even 
                  tells some old mariner’s tale. However, in spite of Bridge’s 
                  love of the English Channel and his subsequent move to Friston 
                  in Sussex, this is not a description of a northern sea: this 
                  is Mediterranean music that manages to avoid too much in the 
                  way of Debussian impressionistic effects. 
                
The Miniature Suite was ‘created’ by Paul 
                  Hindmarsh from a number of Bridge’s fragmentary sketches found 
                  amongst his manuscripts and papers at the Royal College of Music. 
                  Lewis Foreman in the annotation points out that Hindmarsh was 
                  encouraged by the late John Bishop to edit these and prepare 
                  them for publication in 1990. The sketches were from around 
                  1921 and relate to the time of the Miniature Pastorals 
                  – although they are certainly more complex and technically difficult 
                  and have a little more depth to the mood. There are three contrasting 
                  movements: the Chorale is a ‘funeral march’ complete 
                  with fanfares and drum-rolls, the lovely Impromptu is 
                  not difficult but surely provides the young or amateur player 
                  with a relatively easy approach to Bridge’s post-war style. 
                  The scherzo-like Caprice is much more difficult and is 
                  perhaps the most impressive part of the Suite. However 
                  the final March brings the proceedings to a close with 
                  what is really a parody of the form. 
                
The last work on this disc is the Four Characteristic 
                  Pieces dating from the spring of 1917. This music is in 
                  the ‘French’ style and the listener could be forgiven for thinking 
                  that they had come across a newly-discovered work by Ravel or 
                  even Debussy. The reviewer in the January 1918 edition of the 
                  Musical Times was obviously impressed, however I guess that 
                  he was also a little bemused. He wrote that “…a much tougher 
                  proposition is a set of four Characteristic Pieces by 
                  Frank Bridge, entitled Water Nymphs, Fragrance, Bittersweet 
                  and Fireflies. These clever works call for more extended 
                  notice than we can find room for, and we must be content with 
                  merely bringing them to the notice of pianists with a liking 
                  for the pungent and bizarre …” 
                
I am not convinced that after more than ninety 
                  years we would find them ‘pungent and bizarre’ however there 
                  are certainly very few pieces of this quality and mood in British 
                  music at that time. This is complex music that demands a superb 
                  technique and a good aural imagination. 
                
It is an invidious task to suggest what is the 
                  ‘best’ recorded edition of Frank Bridge’s piano music. Peter 
                  Jacobs’ Continuum version is not typically available in the 
                  record shops – although they can be found for sale on some websites 
                  – either second-hand or ‘new.’ As this was the edition through 
                  which I discovered this great music, I tend to have a soft spot 
                  for it. However, I have recently enjoyed listening to Ashley 
                  Wass on Naxos – he seems to have taken Bridge to his heart and 
                  had produced a number of excellent performances. Bebbington 
                  impresses me too. I think especially of the romantic Etude 
                  Rhapsodique and the less that innocent Fairy Tale Suite. 
                  And lastly, he does not mock the Miniature Pastorals. 
                  In spite of their technical simplicity he does take them seriously 
                  and presents them with care and with love. 
                
For the Frank Bridge enthusiast, all three versions 
                  of this music are vital additions to their CD collections. 
                
Finally, the sound quality of this disc is natural 
                  and satisfying and the general presentation is impressive. An 
                  excellent investment! 
                
John France