Last year was rather a good year for admirers of Havergal Brian. 
                  When I wrote the review 
                  for Volume 1 of this series last April I made the point that 
                  that disc was the first ‘new’ – not re-release – in around a 
                  decade. One year on from that superb disc we now have an equally 
                  impressive volume 2. In the interim we have had a superb disc 
                  of symphonies from Dutton 
                  and witnessed what was without doubt the event of the 2011 Proms 
                  – a stunning performance of the Gothic Symphony now enshrined 
                  on a fine pair of Hyperion 
                  discs. Apart from the quality of all these discs it is particularly 
                  pleasing to see that three different labels are now supporting 
                  the Brian cause.
                   
                  I am sure that any collectors who have already acquired some 
                  or most of the above will not need my prompting to buy this 
                  new disc. All of the good impressions garnered by Volume 1 are 
                  confirmed here and – possibly most importantly – the stature 
                  and significance of Brian as a composer of real unique worth 
                  is strengthened. That is the joy of an ever-increasing roster 
                  of discs of music by a relatively unknown composer. The listener 
                  starts to be able to make connections across genres and decades 
                  of a creative life so what once seemed disparate and lacking 
                  coherence starts to gel into an impressively cogent and individual 
                  view of the musical world. The ‘problem’ with Brian was really 
                  one of his own making – a cussed determination to plough his 
                  own furrow regardless of the implications. The flip side of 
                  his oft-quoted expectation of never hearing his works played 
                  is that he did not exercise any practical pragmatism as far 
                  as scoring or subject matter that might have ensured they did 
                  get played. A case in point is the repertoire here; four of 
                  his five operas date from the decade after World War II. In 
                  austerity Britain any new opera was going to be carefully scrutinised 
                  for viability from a financial point of view before any musical 
                  considerations could come into play. What does Brian do?; he 
                  writes works requiring big forces based on what might be termed 
                  old-fashioned style subjects certainly not in line with the 
                  expectations of institutions such as Covent Garden. None of 
                  that matters a jot over half a century later when we can enjoy 
                  the music in its own right.
                   
                  Given that the sessions from which this derives were at pretty 
                  much the same time as those for Volume 1 and that all of the 
                  creative and production team and venue are the same it will 
                  no surprise that all of my superlatives from the previous review 
                  can be rolled out, dusted down and used again. Conductor Garry 
                  Walker paces the music to perfection. I continue to marvel at 
                  his sure handling of material that at first hearing overflows 
                  with motifs and colours but thereby threatens to confound the 
                  unknowing ear trying to perceive a logic and structure. The 
                  playing of the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra is a joy in itself. 
                  The sheer virtuosity demanded from all departments is revealed 
                  by the superb engineering of Graeme Taylor under the direction 
                  of producer Simon Lord. With the exception of the first piece 
                  all of the music receives its world premiere recording. In the 
                  case of the first work, the Symphonic Variations “Has Anybody 
                  Here Seen Kelly?” this new recording significantly trumps 
                  the earlier one in technical and musical terms. I have to say 
                  I retain a special affection for that recording on Forlane from 
                  the unlikely team of Mozart specialist Leopold Hager and the 
                  often fallible Orchestra of Radio Luxembourg. They did a far 
                  better job than might have been expected – the 2 CD set Masterpieces 
                  of the English Musical Renaissance (UCD 16724/5) can still 
                  be found at a price and has continuing value in that it includes 
                  all six of the symphonic movements Brian extracted from his 
                  fabled first opera The Tigers.
                   
                  There is a recurring thread in Brian’s work of taking a simple, 
                  even trite, tune and subjecting to massive transformation. The 
                  term ‘variations’ somehow does not do justice to the process 
                  of deconstruction and reassembly Brian applies. The fact that 
                  he does this here almost as an underscore to a busy scene in 
                  an opera is all the more remarkable. Again, I marvel at the 
                  sheer fecundity of Brian’s invention – nine incident-filled 
                  variations crammed into just over twelve minutes of which one 
                  – a Lento interlude – occupies nearly 1/3 of the total time. 
                  The more I hear Brian the more it strikes me that his music 
                  has more happening in it at any given moment than almost anyone 
                  else I can think of. By that I do not mean simply thickly scored; 
                  yes they often are, but rather I’m referring to an Ivesian delight 
                  in the collision and overlapping of individual lines, motifs 
                  or tonalities. This particular CD does focus on stage works 
                  which are by definition pictorial and descriptive but the density 
                  of material is daunting and it does require quite an investment 
                  of time from the listener to begin to perceive the logic of 
                  the music laid before one. To get the most from the experience 
                  requires more conscious effort on behalf of the listener than 
                  much music which to some degree can retain its effect while 
                  passively washing over you.
                   
                  There are two grouped selections from Brian’s second opera Turandot. 
                  Elements of the story will be familiar to those who know Puccini’s 
                  opera of the same name but apparently the libretto is closer 
                  to the Gozzi original. None of Brian’s operas have ever been 
                  staged so it is hard to be sure how innately theatrical they 
                  are. Brian selected three orchestral passages from the first 
                  act of Turandot to form the suite included here and 
                  they are both dramatic and pictorial in the best sense and certainly 
                  substantial but, ingrate that I am having now heard them as 
                  excerpts, I would really like to hear them in operatic context. 
                  The same is true of the suite that Malcolm MacDonald has excerpted 
                  from the second and third acts of the same opera. I had saved 
                  mentioning MacDonald's name until this point. I have 
                  said it before and will no doubt say it again; was ever a composer 
                  as fortunate as Brian in having MacDonald as his prophet in 
                  the wilderness. His passion for and knowledge of this composer 
                  is little short of stupendous. This is evidenced by the suite 
                  he produced here in 1975 for the simple reason that having studied 
                  the opera score he believed the only way he would ever get to 
                  hear any of this music in his lifetime was by preparing an orchestral 
                  suite. This then had to wait twenty years for a first performance 
                  and another fourteen after that to be recorded. Yet MacDonald's 
                  passion and belief in the importance of Brian continues to burn 
                  brightly and shines through every word of his extensive, detailed 
                  and very interesting liner-note. Again, I have said this before 
                  - by the music alone Brian rarely gives up his secrets immediately 
                  or easily and it is a vital part of his reassessment that the 
                  listener has MacDonald as his guide pointing out key moments 
                  in the structure of the music.
                   
                  The remaining two pieces on this disc are my personal favourites. 
                  Goethe's Faust was a seminal work for many artists but 
                  particularly Brian. The Night Ride recorded hear is 
                  a five minute showpiece for orchestra which comes late in the 
                  opera illustrating Faust and Mephistopheles riding through the 
                  night to the prison where Gretchen is being held. As that brief 
                  description might imply this is a wild ride full of strange 
                  orchestral effects and propulsive energy - again all brilliantly 
                  executed by the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra and recorded 
                  in demonstration quality sound. Quite different is the Preludio 
                  tragico which is the extended - thirteen and half minute 
                  - overture Brian wrote for his third opera The Cenci 
                  in 1951-2. The curiosity here is that Berthold Goldschmidt won 
                  the 1951 Festival of Britain Opera prize with his work Beatrice 
                  Cenci written I think just before the Brian work. Since 
                  Covent Garden - to their shame - refused to stage the Goldschmidt 
                  one can only assume that this is a piece of pure coincidence. 
                  Certainly, this is vintage Brian - as Macdonald says - and it 
                  contains pre-echoes of the concise symphonic form he was to 
                  explore later. Although there are pictorial and narrative elements 
                  to the work this is the piece that to my mind stands most impressively 
                  free of any operatic associations. In the liner, MacDonald with 
                  characteristic skill points out the various themes and how they 
                  relate to the characters and plot of the work but Brian's 
                  real skill is to fuse those illustrative themes into a work 
                  wholly satisfying without relying on programmatic detail. This 
                  is due in part to the fact that in this prelude Brian treats 
                  the thematic material symphonically rather than simply laying 
                  out the purple patches to come. Again, I must compliment Garry 
                  Walker on the skill with which he binds together the often wildly 
                  different passages into such an impressive whole. Credit too 
                  to Toccata for the all-round excellence of this production - 
                  right down to the tracking of the individual variations in the 
                  first work and the notating of the liner with track numbers 
                  and timings. This really is music that benefits from repeated 
                  detailed listening and simple things like that help enormously. 
                  As does the printing of the liner in a good clear reasonably 
                  sized font on brilliant white paper. All in all another stunning 
                  disc of great value and musical worth, I hope a third volume 
                  will follow.
                   
                  Nick Barnard
                    
                
And a review from Rob Barnett
                
   
  Havergal Brian is usually glimpsed on CD through his symphonies. Most recently there has been his 
Gothic Symphony (
Hyperion). With the present CD he is encountered through orchestral material from his largely overlooked and pretty much unperformed five operas. If you were wondering, they are:-
   
  
The Tigers (1917-29)
  
Turandot, Prinzessin von China (1951)
  
The Cenci (1951-52)
  
Faust (1955-56)
  
Agamemnon (1957)
   
  The jolly first piece is a set of variations on the music hall song 
Has anyone here seen Kelly? In this he followed the same path as his friend Joseph Holbrooke who had earlier written three sets of orchestral variations on popular songs. The Brian set forms part of his anti-war satirical opera 
The Tigers. The opera was once broadcast by the BBC in the early 1980s in a studio recording session conducted by Lionel Friend. The music subjects the song to subversive treatment with the least so bearing the stamp of 
The Gothic and of that work’s dedicatee Richard Strauss. It moves smoothly between sinister and seductive, innocent and knowing. The style has more in parallel with his own Fifth Orchestral Suite (the LSSO CBS LP recording now obtainable from KlassicHaus) than with his productions of the 1940s and 1950s. Much of it is sumptuously romantic though sometimes gawky. Kelly emerges as a sort of elusive Eulenspiegel. Track 9 offers a full statement of the song.
   
  There’s a ripplingly anxious night-ride from the opera 
Faust. The gloriously sumptuous harp makes a grand appearance for a change. Discontinuity and rapid gear-changes are again in evidence and register in this five-plus minute orchestral showpiece. In spirit, if not in packaging, this can be grouped with Liadov's 
Baba Yaga and Schierbeck's 
Häxä.
   
  I have known the 
Preludio Tragico to the opera 
The Cenci from a tape I made of the 
Preludio’s BBC broadcast in September 1976. Harry Newstone conducted the New Philharmonia at the Alexandra Palace. It is good to hear it at last in such fine sound. The 
Preludio is a whirlwind of coruscating impressions, jaunty grandeur and bleak tragedy. It is a fittingly blood-curdling echo of the sort of Elizabethan revenge tragedies typified by Webster's 
Duchess of Malfi. It ends amid shreds of a surly march, the beauty of Beatrice and victory or glory in slaughter? You can hear the Fanfare from 
The Cenci on Decca LP 430 369-2 1975 played by the Philip Jones Brass Ensemble. It was reissued on CD as part of a 2CD 
20th Century Album in 2002 on Decca 470501. Shelley’s bloody drama also attracted settings by Berthold Goldschmidt, Bernard van Dieren, Patrick Hadley and Nikolai Tcherepnin. Nor should we forget Ginastera’s opera, 
Beatrix Cenci which is akin in shock value to the reputedly equally full-frontal opera 
Bomarzo; the latter once recorded on 3 LPs by CBS – time for a reissue on CD.
   
  The three pieces from the 1951 opera 
Turandot speak a different language. They derive from the first act of Brian’s Schiller-out-of-Gozzi opera and originate from episodes occurring in the first act. A faintly oriental tone hangs over them and a lot more discontinuity of line than in 
Kelly although the first piece ends by finding some very affirmative lyricism. The second piece is gruffly determined – a mood that Brian knew well. The Macdondald-arranged six movement 
Turandot Suite has less orientalism than in the three pieces. It starts with the jaunty-ungainly 
At the Court of Emperor Altoum. It’s mixed with Brian’s characteristic sour and ungainly heroism yet with a regal accent. The little Minuet is surprisingly pastoral with a lovely work for flute, harp and clarinet and cor anglais. 
The Entrance of Princes Turandot is faintly threatening and without heroism. The 
Nocturno is frankly superb - almost filmic and easier to approach as is the 
Minuet - a most craftsmanly piece of work. 
In the Divan is absurdist in the strutting manner of Prokofiev in 
The Love Of Three Oranges. The final March movement is gritty, gloomy and lugubrious as the marking suggests. It has a slightly Purcellian air and looks back to 
For Valour but with a lither and more economical orchestral vocabulary. It does not end with quite the sense of stamped-down affirmation we might have expected from a concert suite is all.
   
  Accessible Brian authority Malcolm MacDonald provides the generously extensive and encyclopaedically rewarding booklet notes.
   
  This is the second CD of a pair recorded for Toccata Classics by Garry Walker and the BBC Scottish Symphony. Volume One is TOCC0110 and is reviewed here at:-
  
http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2011/Apr11/Brian_orchestral_TOCC0110.htm
  http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2011/Oct11/Brian_TOCC0110.htm
   
  Rob Barnett