Matilda Lloyd writes: Resonance is a multi-faceted word with many different meanings, all of which are explored in this album of music for trumpet and orchestra. It stems from the Latin word resonantia, meaning echo, and both concertos on this album echo music of the past. Weinbergs Trumpet Concerto contains many fanfares that hark back to the trumpets military beginnings, and in the extended cadenza at the opening of the third movement, Weinberg includes snippets of music by other composers, including Mahlers Fifth Symphony, Mendelssohns Wedding March, and Stravinskys Pétrouchka. However, these are not flippant references to the past, but rather euphemisms; Weinberg twists and distorts the quotations into something dark and menacing. Christoph Schönberger has described his Concerto as neo-romantic, drawing upon the harmonic and melodic language of composers from the romantic period. Resonance can also be used to describe the powerful images, feelings, or memories that are conjured up in the mind upon listening to music. Rachmaninoffs Vocalise is the ultimate expression of this kind of resonance. The final work on the disc, Goedickes Concert Étude, holds a personal resonance: it was my favourite work for trumpet and piano when I was growing up. At the start of my career, it was my preferred encore and now I am thrilled to have this brand-new orchestral arrangement by Lee Reynolds.