Here is a remarkable trio of CDs - only available separately - 
                featuring the piano music of John R. Williamson. The first two 
                volumes were first issued on the Dunelm label in 2001 and 2003 
                whilst the third volume was recorded for Diversions (part of Divine 
                Art) in 2009. John R. Williamson was born in Manchester in 1929 
                but for some time has lived in North Wales. 
                
                An original composer might be said to be one whose style is unmistakable 
                and who has long assimilated his earlier models. I believe this 
                to be true of Williamson’s music and there is ample demonstration 
                of this on these three well-filled discs. He has forged a style 
                that convincingly fuses disparate elements into an organic whole. 
                His harmonies are dissonant in that they involve suggestions of 
                bitonality but would be more properly described as rising from 
                symmetrical inversion, called by the composer, palindromic. Textures 
                and harmonies seem to result from the clash of palindromic writing 
                both in the horizontal and vertical planes. This might sound over-technical, 
                yet it is worth mentioning since the clarity of the language allows 
                the listener to perceive how the music is structured as it proceeds, 
                in other words, not just from subsequent analysis. This is a remarkable 
                feat; many works hide their structures, Williamson announces his 
                with bold statements and clear harmonic designs. 
                
                Lest the prospective listener be fooled into thinking that Williamson’s 
                music occupies a rather arid plain, it should be stated at once 
                that the lyrical impulse is very strong and the emotional world 
                is often intense and heartfelt. Indeed much of Williamson’s 
                power as a composer derives from a combination of the palindromic 
                or symmetrical aspects and a predilection for plaintive modal 
                melodies. Time and again in these discs the listener is carried 
                along by sweeps of modal contours that are enlivened and even 
                subverted by the churning harmonies that pass through them. The 
                effect is heightened by the frequent shifting of the modes used 
                for the melodies. A remarkably hypnotic result is achieved, as 
                if Cecil Sharp had met Bernhard Ziehn in some dim forgotten pastoral 
                landscape. In a previous review of a CD of Williamson songs (Dunelm 
                Records DRD0265) I remarked on some of the above characteristics. 
                The main difference on these three discs is that, freed from accompanimental 
                duties, the piano soars into a multitude of figurations and patterns 
                that befit a more flamboyant solo approach. The piano writing 
                is often highly virtuosic yet the difficulties arise not from 
                a desire for showmanship; they come about due to the demands of 
                the music’s structure, logic and emotional affects. Williamson 
                has written many sets of relatively short pieces in which an emotional 
                landscape is set up by the gestures and shapes; a clue to each 
                affect is revealed in the movement headings which are often descriptive 
                of mood. They appear in English: funereal, martial, flamboyant, 
                ruminative, agonising. I am reminded of Scriabin’s indications 
                in his many short piano pieces. That the two composers share this 
                trait and share a seeming obsession with their respective harmonic 
                devices is a point of interest in itself. Of other British composers 
                it is hard to find many points of reference with regard to Williamson. 
                Cyril Scott, whose greatest music is at last being heard, was 
                a pioneer in the use of quartal harmonies, but his free approach 
                is less systematic than that adopted by Williamson. Vaughan Williams 
                blended modal melodies - whether folk tunes or his own - with 
                remarkably original harmonies often featuring parallel triads. 
                Ronald Stevenson has made a study of Ziehn’s Canonic 
                Studies, led there by the example of Busoni. Williamson’s 
                music does not sound like any of these composers; he has his own 
                voice even if he shares some technical approaches with them. 
                
                After much enjoyable listening I have picked out some of my favourite 
                pieces on these discs, grouped by volume.  
                Volume 1 
                
                The first volume begins splendidly with a very aggressive prelude 
                aptly subtitled ‘The Fury’. It is the first in a set 
                of 12 New Piano Preludes. ‘The Fury’ presents menacing 
                chords that chase each other relentlessly. I was reminded a little 
                of the etude that opens Emploi du temps (1915) by Arthur 
                Lourié, which has a similar effect: terse, obsessive and 
                angry. The whole set is strongly inspired and contains many contrasts 
                of moods. Particularly fine are the constantly evolving harmonies 
                of No.3 in D and the delicious descending runs of No.6 in F. The 
                emotional heart of the set is the deeply moving No.9 in A flat 
                ‘Lament for Laddie’; the poignant modal tune is set 
                against piquant figuration. When the tune is doubled at the fourth, 
                organum-like, more false relations occur which heighten the emotive 
                effect. The ending is a chromatic descent as if exhausted by sadness. 
                The set ends with No.12 in B where the clamour of brassy chords 
                is heard, like clashing armour and swords; a disturbing vision 
                that brings the set full circle to ‘The Fury’ in mood. 
                
                
                The Piano Sonata No. 2 in F# shows Williamson dealing with the 
                principles of motivic structure as is often traditional in works 
                of this kind. However the palindromic element is there too, not 
                least in the arch-form structure of its five movements. The first 
                movement is predominantly stormy but with a certain rugged grandeur, 
                as if sea were crashing against rocks. A gentle movement marked 
                Nostalgic follows. After a scherzo and another slow movement, 
                the finale follows with a main subject that suggests kinship with 
                the scherzo of the 1st Symphony of Sibelius. Reference is also 
                made to the opening gestures of the sonata’s first movement. 
                The end is dark and forbidding. 
                
                There follows a set of 12 Palindromic Preludes. Williamson has 
                admitted to a fascination with this form; there are 11 sets of 
                12 preludes so far - of which I assume from the date of composition 
                this set is the first - and they all follow a tonal scheme of 
                C rising by semitones to B but with no distinction between major 
                or minor. There are some special moment in the set: the gently 
                rocking yet dissonant No.2 in C# ‘Lullaby for Baby Jesus’, 
                the puckish No.4 in Eb, the terrifying octaves of No.5 in E; a 
                Baba-Yaga striding through Snowdonia and the marvellous combination 
                of repeated notes and scales in No. 6 in F. If this set has a 
                core it might be the very disquieting No.9 in G# ‘Madness’, 
                which presents a cauldron of oscillating minor ninths that eventually 
                compromise onto an uneasy cadence. No.10 is very beautiful; gentle 
                octaves oscillate this time through a arching melody; is this 
                the cure for ‘Madness’? - the jarring ninths resolved? 
                The set concludes with No.12 in B; a measured pageant of rich 
                textures. 
                
                The Sonatina No.2 is an exuberant work full of dash and vigour 
                and concludes a marvellous CD. 
                
                Volume 2  
                The next disc opens with Song to Nature which reflects on the 
                composer’s cycle journeys through the countryside. 12 Palindromic 
                Preludes, set 5, follow. No.1 in C reveals some fascinating combinations 
                of chords and melodies in dense interplay. No.4 in E flat has 
                beautiful bell-like sonorities; a chiming right hand set against 
                a revolving series of left hand chords. No.6 in F has organum 
                qualities in both hands and is appropriately marked archaic. 
                No.9 in A flat is simple but effective; a two part dialogue with 
                eventual doubling. Although powerful, the set has less variety 
                of texture and mood than the first set on volume 1. Chordal writing 
                predominates and the textures are quite heavy. 
                
                The Piano Sonata No.4 ‘The Palindromic’ starts with 
                a dissonant first movement. Williamson’s dissonance is curious 
                in that he is still able to make the harmonies evolve and move, 
                thus avoiding the static quality of some atonal music. A slow 
                pastoral follows, yet the colours are dark and ruminative. Block 
                chords are used a fair amount and the dissonance is acute. A fleet 
                scherzo brings relief from the oppressive atmosphere of the preceding 
                movement. Extremes of register are used tellingly. The finale 
                begins with vaunting figures leading to a gentle answer in the 
                composer’s favourite parallel fourths. The end is approached 
                through a series of intense blocks of active sound. 
                
                The Seven Interval Studies are really fascinating. The composer 
                acknowledges the Etudes of Debussy as a possible influence although 
                the effect is entirely Williamson’s own. Highlights include 
                No.1 in 7ths; a boiling mixture of clashing lines in both hands, 
                the gentle ringing of No.3 in 5ths and No.4 in 4ths where the 
                composer comes closest to sounding like Cyril Scott. In No.5 it’s 
                a breath of fresh air to hear diatonic 3rds, intervals not often 
                exploited by this composer. Of course they get spiced up during 
                the movements progress. This study might be an ironic commentary 
                on Debussy’s ‘Les tierces alternées’ 
                - No.11 from the second book of preludes. The last study, No.7 
                in octaves, gives another glimpse of that same relentlessly pursued 
                spirit that can be found in Alkan’s Grande Etude op. 76 
                no.3 (1838) and in the finale of Chopin’s Sonata No.2 in 
                B flat minor (1839). Although Williamson’s piece is not 
                so scary as those two demonic utterances it is nice to know that 
                that particular phantom still has some running in him. The second 
                volume ends with the composer playing his Lament for Sarah, 
                written in memory of a granddaughter. 
                
                Volume 3 
                 
                Here Murray McLachlan begins by presenting a selection of palindromic 
                preludes from the 11 sets so far completed. No.6 from set 2 is 
                not dissimilar to No.6 from set 1. No.12 from set 2 is subtitled 
                ‘Homage to Chopin’ and seems to suggest an affinity 
                with the Polish composer’s Etude in C minor op. 25 no.12. 
                Whilst Chopin’s patterns are continuous, Williamson’s 
                pause between each harmonic change and a chorale theme is introduced. 
                No.3 in D from set 8 is particularly strong with martial rhythms 
                and crashing waves of sound. No.1 in C from set 6 has some deft 
                modulations and turbulent textures. No.5 in Eb from set 6 is played 
                with simplicity by the composer. The selection concludes with 
                the whirlwind No.8 in G from set 6. Here the palindromic effects 
                are very audible in a series of viciously exciting contrary motion 
                scales. 
                
                In contrast to the dark moods that predominate in the 2nd 
                and 4th sonatas, the 6th starts on a more 
                jaunty positive note and the textures are more spare with some 
                two part writing. The harmonies sometimes relax into a mood if 
                not quite romantic at least tinged with calmer thoughts. Rugged 
                climaxes try to throw the opening theme off its confident stride. 
                It retains its strong contours throughout the movement and a typical 
                Williamson cadence (with an unresolved 4th) is reached. 
                The slow movement is followed by a sprightly scherzo with many 
                4ths predominating again both in perfect and augmented 
                forms. Some tense sequences ratchet up the anxiety in this exciting 
                movement which as the composer points out is not much of a joke 
                in the traditional understanding of the word scherzo. Stamping 
                chords propel the music to a helter-skelter finish. The finale 
                reveals no let up in energy although thick-textured chordal writing 
                inhibits the flow somewhat. The end is violent and dissonant. 
                
                
                Thirteen Variations on a Tone Row follow. The row is itself palindromically 
                constructed and leads to much inventiveness. Its gapped nature 
                lends the work a mysterious quality. An opening fanfare leads 
                to the variations, which follow each other without a break. I 
                particularly liked variation 7 where the hands are thrown from 
                one end of the piano to the other. Another fanfare appears in 
                variation 11. The 13th variation brings the work to 
                a stormy conclusion. 
                
                The Seven Two-part Inventions provide a change of texture. Their 
                simplicity however does not lead to a dilution of style which 
                is still as vigourous as ever. Williamson revels in the ability 
                to play with simple lines and their interaction. The counterpoint 
                is lyrical and shapely in No.2 in G and playful in No.3 in A. 
                His lines present some of the composer’s favourite harmonies 
                in stretched out form and reveal the sense of unity between horizontal 
                and vertical. By No.5 in C the arpeggiation of the lines allows 
                the composer to express himself harmonically. A typical device 
                can be heard in No.6 in D where a modal theme is followed by its 
                dark side by having its intervals diminished. This process happens 
                twice before the theme returns in its original form. The spiky 
                interactions of No.7 in E conclude the set. 
                
                Throughout the three discs the pianist is the redoubtable Murray 
                McLachlan. He has already done wonders for other composers less 
                well-known than they should be; his sets of Miaskovsky and Chisholm, 
                to name just two with whom he been associated, attest to this. 
                He brings all his skills to bear in these recordings; he had tenderness, 
                strength and those in-between shades that can bring this emotionally 
                varied music to life. He is not afraid of the perilous cascades 
                of Williamson’s more precipitous writing; listen to how 
                he tears into No.8 from Palindromic Preludes set 6 (volume 3). 
                He also finds limpid colours for music such as No.11 from the 
                New Piano Preludes (volume 1). The dense chording of much of Williamson’s 
                writing must pose a great challenge to the voicing abilities of 
                a pianist and it is to McLachlan’s credit that he is able 
                to keep textures generally clear and free from clotting. The world 
                is lucky to have a fine composer such as Williamson and he himself 
                is lucky to have a pianist so dedicated to playing his music as 
                Murray McLachlan. 
                
                These three CDs come at mid-price and they are attractively packaged 
                with Jim Pattison’s original landscape photographs. Those 
                not wishing to try all the volumes at once might start with volume 
                1, since it has, in my view, the best music and the most variety. 
                The recordings (again by Pattison) are clear and have plenty of 
                gain leading to a full sound even on small hi-fi equipment. These 
                discs offer powerful music and committed performances. Williamson 
                is making an important contribution to piano repertoire in a style 
                all his own. All the works on the discs post-date 1991 when the 
                composer was already in his 60s; it would be interesting to hear 
                earlier works to chart the evolution of Williamson’s style. 
                Perhaps a fourth volume might be a chance to do this. 
                
                David Hackbridge Johnson