Classical Editor: Rob Barnett


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THOMAS DUNHILL Violin Sonata No. 1; songs; piano music. David Dunhill (to whom cheques should be made payable) 2 Plym Villas, Plymouth Road, TOTNES ,Devon, TQ9 5PQ United Kingdom.  +44(0)1803 864052 There is a limited supply of these discs. approx £10.50 incl p&p. Confirm price before ordering. [59:57]

 




A couple of years ago the United 88031CD of Dunhill’s second violin sonata played by Susan Stanzeleit made quite an impact. Before that you would occasionally come across the odd song most memorably in Dame Janet Baker’s English song collection on a Saga LP. In more recent years The Cloths of Heavens, a Yeats setting, has been recorded by Sarah Walker and Felicity Lott.

The composer’s son (for years a familiar voice on the BBC and the producer of a 1975 broadcast of his father’s opera Tantivy Towers) has now producer this rare CD: beautifully produced and including two piano pieces, 10 songs (full texts provided) and Violin Sonata No. 1 (1908) in D minor Op. 27.

Sailor Dance [1] is an entertaining piano duet akin to Grainger’s Gum Suckers March: cheery but without Grainger’s anarchistic tendencies. The solo piano piece Remembrance (1914-18) is an example of salon charm, an English pastoral sketch.

The songs are well sung with clear articulation. The voice does sound a little like Dame Janet Baker’s. The Cloths of Heaven [2] and To The Queen of Heaven are big songs and are as close as you will get to the grand scena (cf Finzi’s Hardy or C.W. Orr’s Housman settings). The latter song betrays a slightly ‘hooty’ tone but captures some impressive, almost operatic grandeur, in the latin words which close the song. April, a setting of words by Margaret Rose, is trippingly effective and there is a smile in Pamela Faulkner’s voice. The second group of songs are predominantly light. Two are from a show Something in the City, written in the 1940s and are appropriately light and entertaining surviving the overpay of ‘cockney’ charm. I do hope that the materials for the show are still extant and can be used to mount a revival. The Catch About Love sounded as if might have escaped from the pages of Granados’s Goyescas. Three Fine Ships is a swinging marine ballad comparable to Michael Head’s Estuary.

The three movement first violin sonata is a conservatively melodious piece. The allegro non troppo is clearly influenced by the Bruch violin concerto although both Brahms and Schumann are occasionally evoked. This moves with minimal pause into the Romanza which is not a moment too long. The tumbling pearly runs of liquid notes are quite striking as is the jaunty episode at 3:10. The impassioned romanticism may well remind you of the Ireland Violin Sonata No. 1 and the piano part of the Foulds Cello Sonata. The movement ends in tranquillity. The Russian dance finale melts into some noble gestures familiar, in spirit, from the Brahms piano concertos. Recommended.

Reviewer

Rob Barnett.

Reviewer

Rob Barnett.

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