Stephen King; Bev Vincent; Michael Lewis; Sir Arthur Conan Doyle; Richard Matheson; Ambrose Bierce; E.C. Tubb; T Bissell Hodder & Stoughton (2019) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Chandos Asu: CD-levy Vuosi: 2021, 28.01.2021 Kieli: und
Gramophone Magazine
February 2021
Editor's Choice
Presto Recording of the Week
29th January 2021
Sinfonia of London, John Wilson
Britten: Variations on a theme of Frank Bridge, Op. 10
Bridge: Lament
Berkeley, L: Serenade for Strings, Op. 12
Bliss: Music for Strings
During the 1930s, Bliss, Britten, and Berkeley all contributed major works to the repertoire for string orchestra, following in the footsteps of Elgar and Vaughan Williams. They are joined on this album by Frank Bridge whose Lament was composed during the First World War. This is the fourth recording by John Wilson with his award-winning Sinfonia of London. Bliss composed Music for Strings after he had completed the film score for Korda’s Things to Come, driven by his desire to compose a piece of ‘pure music’, expressing his own ideas rather than those of others. Commissioned in May 1937 by Boyd Neel for the Salzburg Festival that summer, Britten’s Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge was composed at great speed, and helped to establish the young composer’s international reputation. Dedicated to his teacher, Frank Bridge, the theme is taken from the second of Bridge’s Three Idylls for string quartet. Lennox Berkeley composed his Serenade for Strings at Snape Maltings, where he was living with Britten in 1938 / 39. By the time of its completion the nation was at war and the music seems to reflect the composer’s anxious mood as the world faced an uncertain future. The album is recorded in Surround-Sound, and available as a hybrid SACD. The front cover features a painting by Edward Wadsworth of Bliss’s house, Pen Pits, built for him in 1935.
"The players may have changed [since Barbirolli] but the spirit has not. And the sound. Sumptuous is one word – but because this is Wilson that goes hand-in-hand with the keenest articulation. There’s a rosiny immediacy about it all, like being on the podium, or better yet inside the sound...Wilson’s way with strings has come a long way from Hollywood – but the lustre is inescapable." - Gramophone Magazine, February 2021.