Author Archive for Divine Art Recordings Group – Page 2

Musici Ireland to release debut album on Métier

Musici Ireland proudly presents their debut album with Métier – a captivating collection of chamber works by living Irish composers, each recorded for the first time. Among the featured works is the newly commissioned “EARTHRISE,” a powerful Concerto for viola and chamber ensemble by Liam Bates, commissioned by violist Beth McNinch, adding an important new work to the viola repertoire. The album also includes the evocative “Her Charms Invited” by Ian Wilson, the ethereal “Fiol String Trio” by Linda Buckley, Deirdre McKay’s intricate “Mr Shah,” and the haunting “Before the Moon Shattered and Shone Again” by Deirdre Gribbin.

Musici Ireland © Caolan Baron
Musici Ireland © Caolan Baron

Recorded in November 2023 at Grouse Lodge Recording Studios in Ireland, this release showcases the extraordinary talents of musicians from Musici Ireland including violinists Mia Cooper, Ioana Petcu-Colan and Siobhan Doyle; violist Beth McNinch; cellists Katie Tertell and Niamh Molloy; bassist Dominic Dudley; wind players Conor Sheil, Peter Ryan and Meadbh O’Rourke; and harpist Dianne Marshall.

The recording has been expertly produced by Jonathan Allen, a veteran of Abbey Road Studios with over two decades of experience and a distinguished career that includes Grammys, Gramophone Awards, and a BAFTA sound award for his work on the soundtrack of Les Miserables

This album is a significant addition to the contemporary chamber music repertoire, celebrating the vibrancy and creativity of Ireland’s musical landscape.  Divine Art CEO Stephen Sutton has expressed his joy at this new project:

“It’s wonderful to be working with this most excellent of chamber ensembles and presenting a whole set of premiere recordings. Our Métier label has been building a very strong relationship with artists and composers from Ireland and this album will surely be one of the highlights of the coming year.”

Musici Ireland, founded in 2012 as a chamber music collective, has evolved into a groundbreaking multidisciplinary production house, pushing artistic boundaries and creating impactful new works. With a core group of internationally renowned artists—including directors, choreographers, dancers, and composers—Musici Ireland is the only ensemble in the country dedicated to developing and presenting original theatrical and multidisciplinary productions with music at their heart. Their journey began with hundreds of classical performances across Ireland, earning  a strong reputation on the national and international stage. Since 2021, they have expanded our vision, integrating socially aware themes into their work and exploring innovative ways to engage with audiences. Original productions, like the acclaimed “A Mother’s Voice,” blend activism and artistry, bringing powerful stories to life through immersive experiences. This pioneering spirit has taken the ensemble to prestigious venues and festivals, including their recent American debut at the Contemporary American Theater Festival and  performances at the Kilkenny Arts Festival.  As artists-in-residence at the Belltable/Limetree Theatres in Limerick, Musici Ireland continues to explore new creative territories, developing works that challenge and inspire. Musici Ireland stands as a unique force within the Irish arts scene, dedicated to producing innovative, socially relevant, and musically-driven experiences that resonate deeply with audiences.

Album Details

  • Title: ‘Earthrise’
  • Label: Métier
  • Catalogue number: MEX 77133
  • Composers/works:
    • Fiol (Linda Buckley)
    • Before the Moon Shattered and Shone Again (Deidre Gribbin)
    • Mr. Shah (Deirdre McKay)
    • Her Charms Invited (Ian Wilson)
    • Earthrise (Liam Bates)
  • Performers:  Musici Ireland
    • Meadhbh O Rourke (flute)
    • Conor Sheil (clarinet)
    • Peter Ryan (horn)
    • Iona Petcu Colan, Mia Cooper & Siobhan Doyle (violins)
    • Beth McNinch and Ed Creedon (violas)
    • Katie Tertell & Niamh Molloy (cellos)
    • Dominic Dudley (double bass)
    • Dianne Marshall (harp)
  • Recorded on November 21-23, 2023
  • For release in spring 2025

Vote for the Czech Philharmonic as Gramophone’s Orchestra of the Year!

Czech Philharmonic Orchestra of the Year Nominee

Gramophone Magazine’s Orchestra of the Year Award Nominees have been released for 2024, and the Czech Philharmonic has been honored with a selection! As part of their nomination, the recent release of Chromosphere received a spotlight for what made this “a thoroughbred orchestra of immaculate virtuosity.”

“That the Czech Philharmonic should have brought such rich sensitivity to Magdalena Kožená’s recital of Czech songs (07/24), or together with Semyon Bychkov offered an account of Smetana’s Má vlast so powerfully resonant in understanding and affection (04/24), comes as no surprise. But add in a revelatory Mahler Symphony No 1 (11/23), or even the recent album of contemporary works from the orchestra’s Wind Ensemble, ‘Chromosphere’ (2/24), and you find yourself in the company of a thoroughbred orchestra of immaculate virtuosity.”

Czech Philharmonic Wind Ensemble Recordings on Divine Art

Divine Art to begin series of Malcolm Williamson Chamber Music

Antony Gray
Antony Gray © Antony Gray

Malcolm Williamson Chamber Music Vol 1 (Release date first quarter 2025 tbc)

Antony Gray (piano), members of the St Paul’s Sinfonia, Matt Scott Rogers (conductor), selected soloists and ensemble players.

In 2025 Divine Art will release the first volume in a series featuring the chamber music of Sir Malcolm Williamson, 50 years since the composer’s appointment as Master of The Queen’s Music in 1975.

Here is your chance to decide for yourselves whether Malcolm Williamson (1931-2003) has been unjustly neglected. (We think so!) From being someone at the heart of the British musical establishment, including being Master of the Queen’s Music on the recommendation of Benjamin Britten, despite his somewhat anti-establishment views and behaviour, the last thirty years or so have seen an almost complete absence of Williamson from the concert platform and the recording studio, with very few exceptions.

One problem, perhaps more so historically than would be the case today, is that Williamson is almost impossible to pin down stylistically. He could write tuneful children’s operas, bouncy religious music and grand operas with tuneful arias and habaneras, and at the same time serial music of sometimes great dissonance and complexity (which, however, never lacked a lyrical element). This stylistic diversity was too much for some in the establishment, who liked to know what they were dealing with. Williamson responded to these people with characteristic glee and wit!

Antony Gray and Malcolm Williamson
Antony Gray and Malcolm Williamson

All these stylistic means of expression are represented on the present disc. From the ascetic beauty of ‘Pietà’, a twenty-minute Adagio, to the boisterous, and frankly hysterical finale of the uniquely scored Concerto for Wind Quintet and two pianos-eight hands, it’s all here. There’s some extraordinary writing for six trumpets, including a bass, with two pianos and percussion, the score of which was discovered in 2023. There is an early clarinet trio, also rediscovered in 2023, having also been previously rediscovered then re-lost in 1990 (there’s a story there!) and finally a quintet for piano and wind, the only piece on the disc to have previously been commercially recorded.

The performers include regular Divine Artist, pianist Antony Gray (also the producer), members of the St Paul’s Sinfonia and a selected group of skilled instrumentalists.

Williamson is, in fact, a major composer of the twentieth century. His operas and seven symphonies should be programmed regularly, along with the rest of his considerable output, and we hope the present recording will go some way to furthering that goal.

Album details:

  • Label: Divine Art
  • Catalogue number: DDX 21220
  • Title: Malcolm Williamson Chamber Music, Volume 1
  • Works:
    • Concerto for Two Pianos (8 Hands) and Wind Quintet
    • Pas de Quatre for Wind Quartet and Piano
    • Pietà, for mezzo-soprano, oboe, bassoon and piano
    • Trio for clarinet, cello and piano
    • Study/Piece for solo horn
    • 3 Vocalises for clarinet and piano
    • Gallery for 6 trumpets, 2 pianos and percussion
  • Artists:
    • Antony Gray (piano)
    • Sally Lundgren (mezzo-soprano)
    • Sarah O’Flynn (flute)
    • Melanie Ragge (oboe)
    • Neyire Ashworth (clarinet)
    • Meyrick Alexander (bassoon)
    • Roger Montgomery (horn)
    • Joely Koos (cello)
    • Joe Howson, Iain Clarke & Hamish Brown (pianos)
    • Members of St Paul’s Sinfonia:
    • Simon Tong (Trumpet in D)
    • David Carnac (bass trumpet)
    • Laura Garwin (trumpet)
    • Richard Knights (trumpet)
    • Thomas Hewitt (trumpet)
    • Samuel Ewins (trumpet)
    • Jon French (percussion)
    • Matt Scott Rogers (conductor)

Recorded in January and February 2024 in London. For release in the first quarter of 2025.

Remembering Wolfgang Rihm

The Divine Art Recordings Group was sad to hear of the recent passing of German composer Wolfgang Rihm at the age of 72. The Métier Label has been proud to have two albums featuring his Lieder from soprano Clare Lesser and pianist David Lesser, and is thrilled to be releasing Carolyn Enger‘s recording of his work, Auf einem anderen Blatt, on her Resonating Earth recording.

Born in Karlsruhe on 13 March 1952, Wolfgang Rihm began composing at the age of eleven. He subsequently studied with Eugen Werner Velte at the Staatliche Hochschule für Musik in Karlsruhe (1968–72), with Karlheinz Stockhausen in Cologne (1972–73) and with Klaus Huber at Freiburg’s Staatliche Hochschule für Musik (1973–76). He received an honorary doctorate from Berlin’s Freie Universität in 1998 and taught at the Staatliche Hochschule für Musik in Karlsruhe before being appointed professor of composition there in 1985.

Among his numerous honours were the Preis der Stadt Stuttgart, the Berlin Kunstpreis Stipendium, a residency at Villa Massimo in Rome from the Deutsche Künstlerakademie, and the Beethoven-Preis der Stadt Bonn. He was elected jointly to the Akademien der Künste in Berlin, Mannheim and Munich in 1991 and received a Prix de Composition Musical de la Fondation Prince Pierre de Monaco in 1997. He was made Officier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French government in 2001 and received the Ernst von Siemens Musikpreis in 2003.

Wolfgang Rihm was among the most prolific composers of his time, with a catalogue of more than 400 works representing all the major musical genres, including opera (both chamber and full-length), orchestral works (many of them inter-related), chamber music (including 13 string quartets) and solo instrumental pieces. Although his formative works reflected the influence of the European post-war avant-garde, he never repudiated the musical past. Some of his earliest mature works make clear allusions to Austro-German late Romanticism, which was then enjoying renewed acceptance, while his subsequent works drew on the fullest extent of that tradition, however indirectly or obliquely.

Wolfgang Rihm

70th Birthday Recitals Celebrating Peter Seivewright

Peter Seivewright
Peter Seivewright © Divine Art

Pianist Peter Seivewright is celebrating his 70th Birthday with a celebratory series of recitals at St. Mark’s Unitarian Church in Edinburgh during the Edinburgh Fringe Festival!

  • 2rd August 2024 – 6:30 PM: Peter Seivewright performs a jazz pianoforte recital including music by George Gershwin and Friedrich Gulda
  • 15th August 2024 – 8:00 PM: Peter Seiverwight performs Khachaturian’s legendary Piano Sonata and music by J.S. Bach.
  • 24th August 2024 6:30 PM: On the 170th anniversary of Moszkowski’s birth, Peter Seivewright performs piano music by J.S. Bach and Moszkowski

Tickets may be purchased at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival Box Office and the Venue.

Peter Seivewright Recordings

“The Devil’s Dream” — Music by Seán Doherty announced by Métier

The British new-music label Métier (part of the Divine Art Recordings Group) has built a strong relationship over the last few years with composers from the Republic of Ireland including the September 2024 release of ‘The Tyndall Effect’ with music by Graínne Mulvey and the impending appearance of a chamber music album by Musici Ireland. This connection will be strengthened further by the release in early 2025 of a superb album of music for string quartet (all premiere recordings) by Seán Doherty, several with the addition of voice or traditional Irish instruments.

Seán Doherty headshot
Seán Doherty © Divine Art/Seán Doherty

The chamber works of Doherty have been described as ‘unfailingly gripping’ (Irish Times) and ‘wonderfully imaginative, colourful’ (Irish Examiner). In these works, he blends Irish traditional and classical music to thrilling dramatic effect. The works explore themes of death and mourning, as well as major events in Irish history: the Great Famine, the Easter Rising, and the Troubles. A sensation with live audiences, this is the first studio recording of these works.

This album brings together leading performers from Irish traditional and classical worlds. The Sonoro Quartet is one of the premier string quartets of their generation. Based in the Netherlands, they were chosen as the European Concert Hall Organisation’s ‘Rising Stars’ for the 2023–24 season. Irish soprano Sylvia O’Brien is a renowned interpreter of contemporary Irish music, having performed numerous prestigious international premieres, as well as works by many composers who have written specifically for her voice. Mark Redmond is an important exponent of the uilleann pipes, the Irish bagpipe, who, with his extensive performing and recording career, has introduced the instrument to new audiences internationally. They are joined by other exceptional traditional musicians: Lauren O’NeillMolly TobinRobert Harvey, and Doherty himself.

This album is a striking portrait of one of Ireland’s leading young composers. The recording has been made in 2023 in Dublin by engineer Richard Duckworth, who is a lecturer in music technology at Trinity College, Dublin.

Seán Doherty was born in Derry, Northern Ireland, where he was educated at St Eugene’s primary school and Lumen Christi College. He read music at St John’s College, Cambridge, and was awarded a PhD from Trinity College, Dublin, on submission of a thesis entitled ‘Solfaing: The History of Four-Syllable Solmization to the Present Day’. Doherty is currently a lecturer in music at Dublin City University. He is a member of the acclaimed Irish choir New Dublin Voices. 

Doherty has won the Feis Ceoil choral composition four times, the Choir & Organ Magazine composition competition twice, the West Cork Chamber Music Festival ‘Young Composers’ Bursary’ twice, the Jerome Hynes composition award, the St Giles’ Cathedral, Edinburgh composition competition, and the Fragments composition award in association Historic Scotland. His music has been performed by an appreciable number of orchestras, ensembles and soloists.  Six of his songs were featured in the highly acclaimed Métier album “Ghost Songs” (MSV 28599).  Seán Doherty’s setting [of” Lola Ridge’s “Under-Song] is a little miracle (Fanfare)

Album details:

  • Label:  Métier
  • Catalogue number: MEX 77135
  • Title :  ‘The Devil’s Dream’
  • Composer:  Seán Doherty
  • Works:
    • The Devil’s Dream (String quartet)
    • Lament for the Poets (with soprano)
    • No Go (with uilleann pipes)
    • Drochshaol (with uilleann pipes, Irish harp and concertina)
    • Paddy’s Rambles through the Gravel Walks (with fiddle, uilleann pipes, Irish harp and flute and concertina)
  • Performers:
    • Sonoro Quartet (all works)
    • Sylvia O’Brien, soprano
    • Mark Redmond, uilleann pipes
    • Lauren O’Neill, Irish harp
    • Molly Tobin, concertina
    • Robert Harvey, Irish flute
    • Seán Doherty, fiddle
  • Recorded in Dublin May 2023
  • For release Jan or Feb 2025.

Supporting work to cure Alzheimers and Parkinsons diseases

Almost every family has a member who falls with Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s or other form of mental degeneration and work into help for sufferers allowing them to enjoy a longer and more dignified life is of utmost importance. One of the charity albums we’ve made is ‘Mind Music’ – a proportion of proceeds go to Parkinsons UK. The two clarinet soloists both lost parents to these diseases and each composer represented either suffered from or had a close family member afflicted by neurological degeneration, clinical depression or similar…. Do help us to help the helpers by acquiring this wonderful album here (also available from your chosen dealer) or stream on Apple, Qobuz, Spotify and more…

The Music Treasury to Spend An Evening With Burkard Schliessmann

Dr. Gary Lemco’s program, “The Music Treasury” on Stanford University’s KZSU-FM, will feature a program in tribute to pianist Burkard Schliessmann on Sunday, July 14, 2024 at 7 PM Pacific. Listen online at kzsulive.stanford.edu.

Burkard Schliessmann in the studio

Program

  • BACH: Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue in D Minor, BWV 903 (11:55)
  • SCHUMANN: Nachtstuecke, Op. 23 (15:54)
  • CHOPIN: Valse in C# Minor, Op. 64/2 (3:56)
  • SCHUMANN: Arabeske in C Major, Op. 18 (7:14)
  • MENDELSSOHN: Variations sérieuses, Op. 54 (15:00)
  • SCHUMANN: Gesaenge der Fruehe, Op. 133 (10:53)
  • BACH: Italian Concerto in F Major, BWV 971 (12:04)
  • SCHUMANN: Warum? from Fantasy-Pieces, Op. 12 (2:52)
  • SCHUMANN: Fantasy in C Major, Op. 17 (30:00)

Program Transcript Preview:

BURKARD SCHLIESSMANN is regarded as one of the most influential pianists of the modern era. He has received numerous prizes and awards of merits for his piano interpretations, having studied under musical masters Herbert Seidel, Shura Cherkassky, Bruno Leonardo Gelber and Poldi Mildner.

Schliessmann was born in Aschaffenburg. He performed at Steinway Hall in New York vante and orchestral soloist throughout the world and has participated in music festivals in Europe, among these the Münchner Klaviersommer, the festival “Frankfurt Feste,” the Valldemossa Chopin Festival and the Maurice Ravel Festival in Paris. He received invitations from orchestras like the Munich Philharmonic OrchestraWDR Radio Symphony Orchestra Cologne, Symphony Orchestra Wuppertal and the New Philharmonic Westfalia, in addition to other orchestras. He enjoys great popularity in media and has been showcased at major German TV-studios, including the Philharmonie of Gasteig in Munich, the City Hall Wuppertal, and the WDR West German Radio studio in Cologne. Mr. Schliessmann has been featured by the WDR radio in its program ZDF-aspekte in a joint production of the ARD/ZDF TV- channels. He has also been featured by BR Bavarian radio, HR Hessian radio and was broadcasted nationwide and throughout Europe in the cultural programs of ARTE, 3sat, Fidelio-ORF, UNITEL Classica and the US channel Classic Arts Showcase. 

His recordings LIVE & ENCORES and recently SCHUMANN-FANTASIES had been met with outstanding success.  With Fantasies he set new standards and insights in the Schumann interpretation. Therefore he was invited in 2024 as special guest by major US-channels as well Canada and explained his approach to the works and their interpretation. So he was in discussions with Chris Wolf in Winnipeg’s Classic107 – Canada, with Isabella Cao at KUCI, Irvine, California, with Mary Claire Murphy host at WGTE, Toledo, OH, and with David Osenberg in CADENZA at New Jersey and others …  

Schliessmann has received honors and awards for his performances and his musical recordings and has been the subject and guest artist on many radio and television programs. His repertoire embraces Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, Chopin, Liszt, Brahms, Scriabin, the Second Viennese School up to the Avant Garde.  

Schliessmann is Professor for Piano at London Overseas Musicians’ League, LOML, in London, United Kingdom, a special project from Royal Academy London. 

Schliessmann is also a professional scuba diver and serves as an Ambassador for the “Protecting of Our Ocean Planet” program of the Project AWARE Foundation. The inspiration of the variety of colors of the underwater world he converts into differentiated sounds in his artistic interpretations, a phenomenon called synesthesia. In several segments of an interview with Oliver Fraenzke in The New Listener entitled “Interview: Burkard Schliessmann,” Schliessmann describes his experiences of these feelings and impressions.

He currently engages in the study of philosophy and photography.

In 2008, Schliessmann said that he played Bach more than any other composer and that he had played the complete organ works at the age of 21 – and these by memory. 

“As a child and youngster I had been taught by one of the last master-students of the legendary Helmut Walcha, and I completely had been affected by this style of insight into Bach and the internal structures. This method of regarding the independent coherence of all the voices gave me a special comprehension of Bach and his philosophy. Lastly one can say that I have been growing up with Bach, even to this day.”

— Burkard Schliessmann, Fanfare

According to Schliessmann, “Chopin is the crowning and climax of piano-playing. It’s something so unique, all-affecting in emotionalism, musical architecture, and structure, that all past giants are present in it: Bach and Mozart. Chopin’s elegance is so singular, that again you need much experience to convey his music in the real and original style. The question of rubato is very sensitive: It’s nothing arbitrary, but much more something well calculated and well proportioned, something that is integrated in the classical strength of form, which is constructed on the profound knowledge of the polyphonic and contrapuntal structures of Bach and Mozart.

Burkard Schliessmann Recordings

Celebrating Collaboration  – a new album from Métier

Works written for the Kreutzer Quartet and Roderick Chadwick by Gloria Coates, Tom Metcalf, Sadie Harrison and Joel Järventausta

Kreutzer Quartet
Kreutzer Quartet © Kreutzer Quartet

The Kreutzer Quartet is celebrated for decades of collaborating with composers.  These range from many world-renowned figures, including Hans Werner Henze, Judith Weir, George Rochberg, David Matthews and Poul Ruders, to hundreds of young artists, many of whom begin work with the quartet in the countless workshops that they give in Europe, Asia and the Americas. This new album consists of four pieces, in a mix of live and studio performances, by composers of different generations: from the late Gloria Coates, whose celebrated work with the quartet began in the 1990s, to Tom Metcalf and Joel Järventausta, still in their 20s. 

Collaboration became ever more precious for everyone during the Covid-19 pandemic: music-making was threatened, and collaboration, in performance and recording, became newly vital and regained its potency, as can be heard here. Three of the works here were workshopped, completed and recorded under lockdown restrictions. 

Common themes ran through the works which emerged at that time. One of these was the idea of water, of the river. It pours through the music of Joel Järventausta and Tom Metcalf. Sadie Harrison was in the midst of writing pieces for the quartet, based on the River Thames, when George Floyd was murdered in Minneapolis – her immediate, powerful reaction can be heard here. 

And, of course, all collaboration ends. In the summer of 2023, Gloria Coates died, completing her extraordinary journey with all the musicians heard on this recording. This joyful performance of her final work for the Kreutzers marked the last time that they all worked together, celebrating her birthday on stage in London.  

The Kreutzers have had a long a fruitful relationship with Métier Records going back to the 1990s, and have become a cornerstone of the new-music scene in both recording and concertising, and have several more recordings in progress.

Album details:

  • Title: ‘Something So Transporting Bright’
  • Label: Métier
  • Catalogue number: MEX 77132
  • Artists: Kreutzer Quartet (Peter Sheppard Skærved & Mihailo Trandafilovski, violins; Clifton Harrison, viola; Neil Heyde, cello) with Roderick Chadwick – Piano
  • Works
    • Piano Quintet (Gloria Coates)
      The Multiple Burdens of Injustice (Sadie Harrison)
    • Pixelating the River (Tom Metcalf)
    • On Blue (Joel Järvenausta)
  • Recorded 2021-2:  Recording engineer Adaq Khan
  • To be released: late 2024 early 2025 (exact date to be confirmed)

Kreutzer Quartet Recordings on Métier

Wilfred Heaton: The Reluctant Composer – Coming to Divine Art in 2025

Wilfred Heaton
Wilfred Heaton

Sheffield-born composer Wilfred Heaton (1918-2000) is a household name in the brass band world, where some of his early worlds enjoy ‘classic’ status. After his death a ‘hidden’ side of his creativity came to light when manuscripts of orchestral and instrumental music were discovered in which he used to call his “unregarded corner”.  With this release, Murray McLachlan and friends shed new light on the work of this reluctant genius with premiere recordings of instrumental music and songs spanning some six decades, including the first performance of his monumental Piano Sonata composed in the early 1950s.

Heaton spent half his life-time not composing all. Yet he was highly skilled, a gifted child from a very poor background, who had all the tools to be one of the top composers of his day. He said on the phone to Paul Hindmarsh, his biographer and producer of this album, just before he took ill for the last time that he felt the impulse to compose from before his teens, and that “I suppose the impulse never leaves you”. Yet he set his face against composing from his mid 30s, having promised himself that if he couldn’t escape from the “incarceration” of the band world, he would give up composing altogether. He did not find the London composing scene congenial when he tasted it, and for many reasons, stopped new work altogether, relying on recycling and re-purposing what he’d already written.

Having trained as a brass instrument repairer, he changed tack in the 1950s and spent the second half of his life as a teacher and professional conductor based in Harrogate (he was very well respected in Yorkshire). He was also a brilliant pianist (having obtained his LRAM performance diploma at 18). Heaton could have earned his living as a pianist and conductor, had he not been so reluctant and lacking in self-confidence.  Hopefully this new album will bring Heaton new admirers from outside the brass band community.

The performers on the album are among the elite of North West England’s talent and will bring out the brilliance of Heaton’s writing to full effect.

Album details:

  • Title: Wilfred Heaton: A Reluctant Composer
  • Label: Divine Art
  • Catalogue number: DDX 21138
  • Composer: Wilfred Heaton
  • Works:
    • Piano Sonata (performing edition by Paul Hindmarsh)
    • Three Pieces for Piano, Op. 2
    • Pilgrim Reflections for piano (arranged by Paul Hindmarsh)
    • Little Suite for flute and piano*
    • Four Vignettes for clarinet and piano** (arranged by Paul Hindmarsh)
    • Hay Harvest for soprano and piano***
    • The Dove’s Answer for soprano and piano***
    • O Fortune for unaccompanied soprano***
    • The Chief Glory for soprano and piano*** (arranged by Paul Hindmarsh)
    • Welcome for Me for high voice and piano***
  • Artists
    • Lesley-Jane Rogers (soprano) ***
    • Alex Jakeman (flute)*
    • Ronald Woodley (clarinet)**
    • Murray McLachlan (piano)
    • To be recorded at Stoller Hall, Chetham’s School of Music, Manchester in August 2024
  • Recording engineer: James Cardell-Oliver
  • Producer: Paul Hindmarsh

Divine Art announces first recording of the Complete Piano Sonatas of composer Anatoly Alexandrov

Clarisse Teo © John Cooper
Clarisse Teo © John Cooper

Divine Art Recordings Group is delighted to announce the signing of Singaporean pianist Clarisse Teo who will feature in one of the year’s most significant recordings, a four-CD set (and digital album) containing all 14 of the superb Piano Concertos by the 20th century Soviet composer Anatoly Alexandrov (1888-1982) which will be scheduled for release before the end of 2024.  Clarisse has made a special study of these works and says about the new recording:

“Having always had a passion for exploring music beyond the parameters of mainstream repertoire, my first encounter with the music of Anatoly Alexandrov (1888-1982) slightly over a decade ago was through his Piano Sonata No. 4 in C major, Op. 19 (1922, rev. 1954). I was immediately drawn to his lyrical melodies, which had echoes of Nikolai Medtner and Sergei Rachmaninov, and consequently wanted to learn more about this composer and his works.

Despite having been incredibly prolific during his lifetime composing primarily solo piano and vocal music, Alexandrov’s music remains largely undiscovered even till today except amongst the most devoted pianophiles. Like Medtner, he wrote fourteen piano sonatas, a large quantity even amongst his fellow composer-pianists like Sergei Prokofiev, Nikolai Myaskovsk  and Samuil Feinberg. Being written consistently throughout his life, the sonatas reflect Alexandrov’s stylistic evolution, which in part was impacted by various socio-political events of that era.

Although there previously have been several pianists who have recorded some of Alexandrov’s solo piano works, none have recorded all fourteen sonatas so I decided to undertake this task when I embarked on my doctoral studies in 2020. Through this recording, I endeavour to present a more holistic picture of Soviet music during the 20th Century beyond the household names of Prokofiev and Dmitri Shostakovich and look forward to introducing these pieces to a wider audience.”

An avid advocate for lesser-known and contemporary music known for her ‘confidently eclectic tastes’ (The Straits Times, 2022), Singaporean pianist Clarisse Teo has appeared internationally both as a soloist and chamber musician and has been featured in the album ‘Rarities of Piano Music at “Schloss vor Husum” from the 2019 Festival’ (Danacord Records). 

Under the tutelage of Timothy Ku (piano) and Marietta Ku (violin and viola), Clarisse obtained a FRSM in piano, DipABRSM (Distinction) in violin and DipABRSM in viola. After reading Law at the National University of Singapore, she studied with Sinae Lee ** at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland on a partial scholarship and attained a Master of Music in piano performance. Funded by the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland Trust and the Trailblazer Foundation Ltd (Singapore), Clarisse graduated from the University of St Andrews with a Doctor of Performing Arts degree, where she conducted practice-based research into the fourteen piano sonatas of the 20 Century Soviet composer Anatoly Alexandrov under the supervision of Sinae Lee and Dr. Christina Guillaumier.

** Sinae Lee also made a pioneering 4-CD set for Divine Art with the complete piano music of Karol Szymanowski (DDA 21400, 2006)

Album Details

Label: Divine Art
Catalogue number: DDX 21401
Formats:  CD (4-disc box set);  download and streaming
Artist: Clarisse Teo (piano)
Composer: Anatoly Alexandrov
Works:

  • Piano Sonata No. 1 in F sharp minor, Op. 4 “Sonata-Skazka” (1914)
  • Piano Sonata No. 2 in D minor, Op. 12 (1918)
  • Piano Sonata No. 3 in F sharp minor, Op. 18 (1920, rev 1956 & 1967)
  • Piano Sonata No. 4 in C major, Op. 19 (1922, rev 1954)
  • Piano Sonata No. 5 in G sharp minor, Op. 22 (1923, rev. 1938)
  • Piano Sonata No. 6 in G major, Op. 26 (1925)
  • Piano Sonata No. 7 in D major, Op. 42 (1932)
  • Piano Sonata No. 8 in B flat major, Op. 50 (1939-44)
  • Piano Sonata No. 9 in C minor, Op. 61 (1945)
  • Piano Sonata No. 10 in F major, Op. 72 (1951)
  • Piano Sonata No. 11 in C major, Op. 81 “Sonata-Fantasia” (1955)
  • Piano Sonata No. 12 in B minor, Op. 87  (1962)
  • Piano Sonata No. 13 in F sharp minor, Op. 90  (“Sonata-Skazka” (1964)
  • Piano Sonata No. 14 in E major, Op. 97 (1971)

Recorded at Studio A, Royal Conservatoire of Scotland between May 2021 and December 2022

Métier Records Signs Outstanding French Cellist Gwendeline Lumaret for an album of works by Naji Hakim

Following the success of a recent album of music by French-Lebanese composer Naji Hakim for organ and other solo instruments, Métier will produce a new collection of Hakim’s music for cello performed by French Cellist Gwendeline Lumaret. The recording is to be made in Paris on 5th and 6th July, and is likely to see release towards the end of this year.

Gwendeline Lumaret and Naji Hakim © Michel Etchelet
Gwendeline Lumaret and Naji Hakim © Michel Etchelet

The programme on this recording is devoted to Naji Hakim’s works for cello, comprising four works for the solo instrument and variations for cello and piano, where the composer plays alongside the cellist.  Although Naji Hakim has been composing works for various formations – instrumental, vocal and symphonic – since 1986, it was not until 2020 that he decided to write for the cello, at the invitation of the late Armenian soloist Avetis Gyogchyan (1964-2022), for whom he composed the diptych Prélude et Habanera (2020). This was the starting point for the programme on this album. This was followed by the Missa cum jubilo (2020), inspired by Gregorian melodies, the Levantine Variations (2021) for cello and piano, as well as Arabesque and Variations (2021) for solo cello, dedicated to Gwendeline Lumaret, and finally, Montmartre (2023), initially written for solo viola; a piece inspired by the faith of the composer, who was organist at the Basilique du Sacré-Coeur in Montmartre from 1985 to 1993.

Gwendeline LUMARET is a graduate of the Conservatoire Régional de Lyon, the Conservatoire Régional de Boulogne-Billancourt, the École Normale de Musique de Paris, the Conservatorio Superior de Barcelona, the Schola Cantorum and the CNSM de Paris, in cello, chamber music, analysis, pedagogy and conducting. She is a First Prize winner in cello and chamber music at the Gaetano Braga and at the Union des Femmes Artistes Musiciennes International Competitions. She is member of the Orchestre Hexagone and the Coruscant Chamber Orchestra. Founder of the SAFPEM, she has published recordings with Azerbaijani singer Alim Qaasimov. She is currently employed as professor at the Conservatoire Régional in Besançon.

Naji HAKIM (b.1955) studied at the Conservatoire de Paris and won ten first prizes at international organ and composition competitions. He was the organist of the Basilique du Sacré-Coeur, succeeded Olivier Messiaen at the Église de la Trinité (Paris), and taught at the Conservatoire de Boulogne and at the Royal Academy of Music (London). He is doctor honoris causa of the Pontifical Holy Spirit University (Kaslik, Lebanon). His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI awarded him the Augustae crucis insigne pro Ecclesia et Pontifice. His works include instrumental, symphonic, and vocal music. www.najihakim.com

Gwendeline Lumaret plays Naji Hakim

Label: Métier
Catalogue number:  MEX 77130

Works:

  • Prélude et Habanera  (solo cello)
  • Missa cum Jubilo (solo cello)
  • Montmartre (solo cello)
  • Arabesque Variations (solo cello)
  • Levantine Variations (cello/piano)  *
  • Performers :

Gwendeline Lumaret (cello)
Naji Hakim (piano) *

Ian Pace To Release Two Major Albums on Métier Records

Ian Pace © Luis Castilla
Ian Pace © Luis Castilla

New-music specialist label Métier Records is announcing two substantial sets of seminally important contemporary works for piano: a 2-CD set of music by Horaţiu Rădulescu and a four-disc omnibus of music by Michael Finnissy, performed by premier Métier artist Ian Pace.  Both sets have been recorded over the last two years and the label team hope to schedule release of both in mid Autumn of 2024.

Horaţiu Rădulescu was the leading figure in the field of Romanian spectral music, that music which derives massive, overwhelming sound masses from the very basics of harmonic spectra. In the second half of his career he would combine this with Romanian folk music and Byzantine chant, often in startling contrapuntal combinations employing techniques developed during the European Renaissance. Ian Pace worked extensively with Rădulescu for two decades, and the composer wrote his last completed work, the Piano Sonata No. 6, for him. These discs feature authoritative recordings of Rădulescu’s complete piano works, exhibiting a mixture of plasmatic sound and virtuosic combinations of folk songs and dances.

Michael Finnissy is one of the most renowned of all living British composers, and especially known for vast output for piano, an output marked by an almost demented level of virtuosity as well as dense and intricate collages of material alluding to music from many centuries and many genres. Ian Pace is the leading interpreter of his work, having performed Finnissy’s complete oeuvre for piano in two major cycles in 1996 and 2016. He has recorded a range of earlier discs of Finnissy for Divine Art, most notably the five-and-a-half-hour cycle The History of Photography in Sound, his recording of which won widespread critical acclaim. For this new set, he presents a brand new recording of Finnissy’s second largest piano cycle, the four book Verdi Transcriptions (available earlier in a two-book version, but here in the much-expanded version on disc for the first time), a kaleidoscopic set of 36 pieces of greatly varying length, working chronologically through Verdi’s output, but with a monumentalism to the cycle as a whole which resembles an extended symphony of Bruckner or Mahler. Also in the set is Finnissy’s most notorious work, English Country-Tunes, a unique combination of reckless virtuosity and ravaging piano textures with intense nostalgia for an imaginary English idyll expressed through timeless melodies akin to folk tunes. The set also features a range of other works relating to music of Beethoven, Rossini, Schumann, Brahms, Johann Strauss II, Mahler and William Billings, and Finnissy’s further ‘operatic’ cycle, the Yvaroperas

Ian Pace is a world-renowned interpreter of new music for the piano. He has played in many countries, recorded over 40 CDs, including a series for Divine Art, given well over 300 world premieres, and worked with many of the leading composers of today. He is strongly associated with the music of Michael Finnissy, whose complete piano works he performed in two landmark series in 1996 and 2016, and whose five-and-a-half-hour The History of Photography in Sound he premiered complete in 2001 and subsequently recorded for Divine Art’s Métier label, as well as publishing a monograph on the work. He is also a leading performer of the works of Pierre Boulez, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Mauricio Kagel, Helmut Lachenmann, Pascal Dusapin, Horatiu Radulescu, Christopher Fox and many others. He is also a scholar, whose research and teaching exists at the interactions of musicology, cultural sociology, history, practice-research, critical theory, and the study of education. He is Professor of Music, Culture and Society at City, University of London, where he has worked since 2010, and where he was made Professor in 2021. He has also written regularly for wider publications including the London Review of BooksTimes Higher EducationThe CriticThe Spectator and The Telegraph.

Album details:

Michael Finnissy : piano works (album title tbc)

Catalogue number: MEX 77402 (4CDs and digital album for download and streaming)

Works:

  • Verdi Transcriptions, Books 1-4
  • Beethoven’s Robin Adair
  • Brahms-Lieder
  • English Country Tunes
  • Preambule zu ‘Carnaval’/Erste Symphonische Etude/Zweite Symphonische Etude
  • Romeo & Juliet are Drowning
  • Rossini
  • Strauss-Walzer
  • ‘What the Meadow-flowers tell me’
  • William Billings
  • Yvaroperas

(all composed by Michael Finnissy)

Artist: Ian Pace (piano)

Horaţiu Rădulescu: piano works

Catalogue number: MEX 77210 (2CDs and digital album for download and streaming)

Works:

  • Piano Sonata No. 1
  • Piano Sonata No. 2
  • Piano Sonata No. 3
  • Piano Sonata no. 4
  • Piano Sonata No. 5
  • Piano Sonata No. 6
  • Omaggio a Domenico Scarlatti
  • The Origin III

(all composed by Horaţiu Rădulescu)

Artist: Ian Pace (piano)

Two new contemporary vocal albums from Clare and David Lesser on Métier

Leading New-Music label Métier Records announces two albums of modern vocal music from husband-and-wife team Clare and David Lesser, featuring the music of John Cage and Michael Finnissy. Both will be scheduled for release in the autumn.

Clare Lesser
Clare Lesser © Hassina Sakhri

The first album brings together several of John Cage’s lesser-known works for voice, percussion, and radios. Cage explored the possibilities of radio throughout his composing career, from the early Imaginary Landscape (1939), intended as a broadcast work;  Imaginary Landscape 4  (1951) – which involved radios as instruments – to the much later Europeras (1987-1991), exploiting the medium’s inherent possibilities to both provide sonic material and to disrupt ongoing musical processes. In Speech (1955) Cage focuses on ways of decontextualising broadcast news by overlaying live spoken words with multiple radio transmissions to create a sonic collage. Radio Music (1956) continues these ideas, but without the live speech element. All of the works on this album showcase Cage’s enduring fascination with chance and indeterminacy. Sculptures Musicales (1989) blends music with visual art in the production of sonic gestures suspended in time, using a wide variety of resonance producing objects, from gongs and chimes to pebbles, shells and bamboo. One¹² (1992) is one of Cage’s very last works, written in the year of his death. For solo voice, it comprises a series of numbers using the ancient Chinese I-Ching oracle, controlling a complex range of vocal sonorities and responses.

David Lesser © Hassina Sakhri
David Lesser © Hassina Sakhri

The album devoted to Michael Finnissy showcases works for soprano, clarinet and piano, many of which were dedicated to the performers. Falling into three broad groups, the repertoire consists of substantial works for soprano and piano – Beddoes (2018-24), Dino Campana (2020), Catchpenny Rhymes (1986-89, revised 2018) and Remembrance Day (2014); shorter pieces for the same duo – Oxford in 1814 (1966-67) and John Keats Operatic (1974-76); works for soprano, clarinets and piano, Blessed Be I, III, and IV (1992 – 2002) and Caithness with Descants (2006-07). Echoes of folksong, hymnals and the Romantic Lieder and bel canto operatic traditions can all be heard, while themes encompass loss, love, and the magical realism of folk poetry.  As the title suggests this is a sequel to Clare and David’s 2016 release “Singular Voices” (Métier MSV 28557).  It is also worth noting that this is the fourth all-Finnissy album being launched by Métier in 2024 bringing the long-running series to a current count of 17 titles.

Album Details

Carl Rosman © Carl Rosman/Divine Art
Carl Rosman © Carl Rosman/Divine Art

Radio With/Out Voice

Catalogue number: MEX 77124
Works:

  • Sculptures Musicales
  • One12
  • Speech
  • Radio Music

(all composed by John Cage)

Artists:

  • Clare Lesser (soprano)
  • David Lesser (piano)

Singular Voices II

Catalogue number MEX 77127
Works:

  • Beddoes
  • Remembrance Day
  • Catchpenny Rhymes
  • Oxford in 1817
  • Campana
  • Blessed Be! (versions I, III and IV)
  • Caithness with Decants
  • John Keats: Operatic

(all composed by Michael Finnissy)

Artists:

  • Clare Lesser (soprano)
  • Carl Rosman (clarinets, basset horn)
  • David Lesser (piano)

Coming Soon from Métier Records: Carolyn Enger’s “Resonating Earth”

Divine Art’s new-music label Métier welcomes acclaimed pianist Carolyn Enger to its quickly-growing international roster for a new album to be released in the summer.

Carolyn Enger
Carolyn Enger © J Henry Fair

Resonating Earth features the music from Enger’s multimedia project of the same name. The program directly links classical music performance to environmentalism and conservation efforts with a bold aesthetic. A stylistically fluid creation with a wide range of ambient music, including John Luther Adams, Marcos Balter, John Cage, Philip Glass, Iman Habibi, Sean Hickey, Missy Mazzoli, Meredith Monk, Nico Muhly, Wolfgang Rihm and Caroline Shaw. The program seeks to transport listeners to a still, meditative space, allowing them to decompress from their daily lives, and invites introspection about humanity’s place on the planet, inspiring action to protect our beautiful, fragile world. 

Internationally celebrated American pianist Carolyn Enger has gained critical acclaim for her exquisite lyrical playing, as well as her deeply felt interpretations. Ms. Enger’s touring opportunities have included venues throughout the United States and beyond, including the Museum of Jewish Heritage in New York, the Consul General of the Federal Republic of Germany, United States Military Academy West Point, the Sheen Center for Thought & Culture, Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall, Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts, The National Gallery of Art in D.C., and most recently the National Gallery in Oslo. In addition to an active performance schedule on two continents, Ms. Enger has enjoyed remarkable success as a recording artist: The New York Times selected her Naxos recording of intimate Ned Rorem miniatures, Piano Album I & Six Friends, as one of the newspaper’s “Best In Classical Recordings”, writing “Among the 90th–birthday tributes this year to the essential American composer Ned Rorem, this recording especially stands out,” while Gramophone declared, “Enger raises the miniatures to a higher level.” Recently her article, The Mischlinge Exposé: Stories of Assimilation and Conversion, was published in the book Women Defying Hitler: Rescue and Resistance under the Nazis, by Bloomsbury Academic. Ms. Enger studied at the Manhattan School of Music and is a Steinway Artist.

Album details:

  • Title: “Resonating Earth”
  • Label: Métier
  • Catalogue number: MEX 77128
  • Artist : Carolyn Enger (piano)
  • Works:
    • Quarry Waltz (Meredith Monk)
    • Bagatelle (Marcos Balter)
    • Lilt (Nico Muhly)
    • Auf einem anderen Blatt (Wolfgang Rihm)
    • Orizzonte (Missy Mazzoli)
    • In a Landscape (John Cage)
    • Nunataks (John Luther Adams)
    • Etude No. 2 (Philip Glass)
    • in the brittle quietude (Iman Habibi)
    • Gustave Le Gray (Caroline Shaw)
    • The Birds of Barclay Street (Sean Hickey)
    • Dream (John Cage)
    • Reckoning (Sean Hickey)
    • Ellis Island (Meredith Monk)
  • Album duration: 75:52
  • Recorded by Daniel Rorke at Manhattan School of Music, New York
  • Editing and Mastering by Divine Art composer/performer Carson Cooman of Overtone Audio

Métier Announces a new album of music by Justin Connolly

Photo; David Waldner

The English composer Justin Connolly (1933-2020) is the subject of an inspirational new album to be released later this year  by Divine Art/Métier. In a 1988 interview Pierre Boulez spoke about the British music that interested him during what he described as ‘golden years’ in London. He named only five composers (with Britten and Tippett notable for their absence). Justin Connolly’s place in that list is striking given the almost complete absence of his music from the public stage in recent years  perhaps due to an extended compositional break caused by ill health in the late 70s and 80s. This new double album will be the most extensive picture yet of Connolly’s conceptually rigorous, highly lyrical, deeply virtuosic, and sometimes curiously playful music. 

Cellist and producer Neil Heyde  writes:  “Connolly was an inspirational teacher at the Royal Academy of Music in London from 1989-1996, and a deeply curious and collaborative colleague. His knowledge of and enthusiasm for repertoire well outside the mainstream was legendary, and his sharp intellectual engagement with every dimension of music making, from the most abstruse to the most pragmatic, was matched with a wonderfully generous and open spirit. The key aim of this project is to capture the legacy of his special sensibility by recording the following pieces for the first time.” (Four pieces will also receive world premiere performances).

Neil Heyde is leading the project in close collaboration with his Kreutzer Quartet colleagues, Peter Sheppard Skærved and Mihailo Trandafilovski. Clarinettist Roger Heaton will record Gymel-B with Neil, and Royal Academy of Music students are collaborating side-by-side on the larger ensemble pieces. The project has been made possible by a research grant from the Academy’s Research Committee.  The recording sessions are taking place during the spring in London with renowned engineer Adaq Khan.

Album details

  • Title:  Justin Connolly: Music for strings (plus…)
  • Label: Métier
  • Catalog number: MEX 77209
  • Format:  CD (2-disc set),  digital download and streaming
  • Works (all composed by Justin Connolly):
    • Tesserae C, for solo cello, op. 15/3 (1971)
    • Triad V, for violin, clarinet and cello, op. 19 (1971) 
    • Ceilidh, for four violins, op. 29/1 (1976) 
    • Celebratio super Ter in lyris Leo, for three violas and accordion, op. 29/2 (1994-5)  *
    • Collana, for solo cello, op. 29/3 (1995) 
    • Gymel-B, for clarinet and cello, op. 39/2 (1995) *
    • Celebratio per viola sola, op. 29/4 (2005) *
    • String Trio, op. 43 (2009-10) *
    • Tesserae E, for piccolo and double bass, Op. 15/V (1972)**
    • * world premiere
    • ** bonus track with the original performers, Nancy and Bert Turetzky, recorded in Melbourne, 1982
  • Artists:
    • Roger Heaton (clarinet)
    • Peter Sheppard Skærved (violin & viola)
    • Mihailo Trandafilovski (violin)
    • Neil Heyde (cello)
    • Muriel Oberhofer, Tiago Soares Silva and Emily Su (violins)
    • Andrea Fages and Adonis Lau (violas)
    • Alise Siliņa (accordion)
    • Dmytro Fionaruk (clarinet)

Previously on Métier

Announcing James Cook Organ Symphonies performed by Kevin Bowyer

James Cook
James Cook © James Cook/Divine Art

Foremost British organist Kevin Bowyer makes his first appearance on the Divine Art label with a recording of two symphonies for organ by James Cook. This will be the ninth album of Cook’s music from Divine Art, ranging from operatic extracts, many organ works, and sacred choral and vocal compositions.  The two works on this new album are his Symphony No 8 (“Olympian”) and No. 9 (“Apollonian”). Both symphonies were written in 2006 and orchestrated in 2011. The recording was made on the organ of Glasgow University Memorial Chapel in 2023.

James Cook (b.1963) briefly studied composition at Oxford University during the Hilary Term of 1994. Prior to that he composed works which include ‘A Carrollean Symphony’, ‘Symphony in Yellow’ and the ‘Jude the Obscure Symphony’.

After his stint at Oxford he wrote sacred vocal music, much of which has been released on the Divine Art and Diversions labels. From the year 2000 he turned to writing organ music and in 2006 completed a sequence of nine organ symphonies, four of which have also been released by Divine Art.  Since 2010 he has concentrated on composing opera, four of which make up a cycle of Biblical operas. His first opera, ‘Dorothy’ was performed by Secret Opera at Theatre N16 in London in December 2015.

Kevin Bowyer at organ © Katy Cooper
Kevin Bowyer © Katy Cooper

Kevin Bowyer (b.1961) has enjoyed a prolific recording and recital career and is known for his powerful performances of the most challenging contemporary works including music from Ferneyhough, Sorabji, Maxwell Davies and many more, but he has a very wide repertoire from all periods, including recordings of the complete organ works of J.S. Bach, Brahms, Jehan Alain, Alkan and others.

Album details

  • Title: James Cook: Organ Symphonies 8 & 9
  • Label: Divine Art
  • Catalogue number :  DDX 21136
  • Composer : James Cook
  • Works :  Organ Symphony No, 8 (“Olympian”);  Organ Symphony No. 9 (“Apollonian”)
  • Performer:  Kevin Bowyer (organ of Glasgow University Memorial Chapel)
  • Recorded in 2023
  • Release date to be confirmed, between July and October 2024.

James Cook Recordings

Remembering David Lumsdaine

David Lumsdaine
David Lumsdaine in 2005 © David Lumsdaine

David Lumsdaine (1931-2024) was an Australian composer, who studied at the New South Wales Conservatorium of Music before moving to England in 1952. He attended the Royal Academy of Music in London studying composition and subsequenetly lectured at Durham University (where he founded and directed the Electronic Music Studio)  and Kings College London.

In the 1960s he was immersed in English contemporary musical life and established his career with such works as Kelly Ground, Flights, and Mandalas 1 and 2.

During his time in London he became friends with the poet Peter Porter and, as well as sharing a flat, they collaborated on many works including Temptations in the Wilderness, Story from a time of Disturbance and Annotations of Auschwitz.

He worked tirelessly throughout the 1950s and 60s, composing many works which he later destroyed as he said he saw little point to releasing work that sounded like anyone else.

The 1970s were productive years: Ruhe sanfte, sanfte ruh’ for solo piano (and its metamorphosis in the chamber work Mandala 3 featured as the title track on a Metier recording:  MSV 28565); Sunflower (also for chamber orchestra) and Hagoromo (for the BBC Proms) are all remarkable works from this decade.

He spent his time between England and Australia, having returned there in 1973. He composed strikingly original music that embodies all that is important to him in the Australian landscape – its shapes and rhythms, its creatures, its sudden violence, its sense of unlimited space. His passion for the natural world is embodied in a developing passion for field recording – his archive of over three thousand recordings is held in the British Library’s National Sound Archive, much of which can be accessed online. In 1997 though still spending time in Australia, he moved to York where his wife Nicola Lefanu had been appointed Professor of Music at York University. 

David passed away on 12 January 2024 at the age of 92.

David Lumsdaine Recordings

Spotlight on Burkard Schliessmann

International Piano has recently published some fantastic spotlights of Divine Art recording artist Burkard Schliessmann. In combination with coming interviews and rave reviews in Fanfare magazine, we felt we needed to put all of these in one easy-to-read location:

Burkard Schliessmann
Burkard Schliessmann © Mathias Heyde, Berlin

In the December 2023 issue of International Piano, Peter J Rabinowitz offers a survey of the recorded history of Berg’s Piano Sonata, Op 1, which includes this spotlight on Schliessmann’s recording on At the Heart of the Piano:

“[Burkard Schliessmann’s] performance… is a penetrating one.”

—Peter J Rabinowitz

International Piano wasn’t the only one excited by Schliessmann’s Berg Sonata recording:

“The Berg Sonata arises from the fire of Scriabin’s Op 74/5 like a phoenix soaring in a post-Tristan world. Schliessmann’s considered, polished reading, impeccable in its realisation of complex textures, is a model of its kind. This, coupled with a prevailing crepuscular tendresse gives Schliessmann’s reading warmth and academic integrity, bringing his thought-provoking album to a perfect close.”

—Colin Clarke, Fanfare

The same issue also featured a review of his new Live & Encores release:

“the piano is superb, as is the acoustic.… There is musical intent and a strong personality evident… Schliessmann is clearly a strong musical personality”

—Jonathan Dobson

You can also read Schliessmann’s own look at Live & Encores on the International Piano website:

Burkard Schliessmann's FAZIOLI F278-3482
FAZIOLI F278-3482 © Burkard Schliessmann

“It really was a special and inspiring moment when I selected a Fazioli F278 on 6 March 2023: this precise instrument, the F2783482, immediately reached my heart and soul because it enabled me to communicate in works from all periods. It gave the impression of being born anew for each work, with an extraordinary palette of colours, flexibility, clarity, transparency and presence, as well as warmth. I wanted to capture this sound in a recording, and those present – Paolo and Luca Fazioli, Dieter and Sylvia Fischer, Job Wijnands – were thrilled by this idea. Elena Turrin organised three dates in April at the Fazioli Concert Hall when in the presence of invited guests I presented a wide-ranging programme that was recorded ‘live’ by the excellent sound engineer Matteo Costa. This repertoire – captured on my new album ‘Live & Encores’ – consists of works that I have studied since my youth and performed many times. This programme is therefore very personal to me.…

Continue reading on International Piano.

Fanfare magazine has also joined in on the praise and features for Live & Encores – with an upcoming interview scheduled for publication in the March/April issue (just in time for his upcoming Schumann release!):

“It is impossible to find words to give this recording a higher recommendation. It has already earned a spot on my want list for the current year and I’ll continue to listen to it regularly. ”

—James Harrington

“From the grand, rolled chords of the “Sinfonia” of Bach’s Second Partita, several things become clear: this is an interpretation of conviction and clarity, caught in ideal sound and performed on a phenomenally well-prepared piano. This is a dream of a performance: one revels both in the loveliness of the piano and in Schliessmann’s playing. Schliessmann’s questing mind and solid technique present us with interpretations that convince at every level. Recommended ”

—Colin Clarke

And the praise continues on Audiophile Audition:

“This most recent release by German classical Burkard Schliessmann…offer[s] moments of poetic transport, brief islands of relief between fateful urgings of the grandly sweeping landscape that feels conversant… Expressively nuanced, the music accelerates and retreats in coy, salon gestures, both bemused and subtle in their tragic lilt.”

—Gary Lemco

New Album of Recorder Rarities from John Turner on Divine Art

Coming May 2024 and featuring: John Turner (recorder), Stephen Bettany (piano), Laura Robinson (recorder), Catherine Yates (viola), Alex Mitchell (viola)

John Turner
John Turner © Divine Art

A new double album of chamber music featuring the leading recorder player John Turner will be released on Divine Art around May 2024 with the title ‘Highways and Byways’.  It’s a set full of surprises. There are recorder pieces by well known and admired composers: Lennox Berkeley, John McCabe and Thomas Pitfield. Other rare recorder music by well known composers includes pieces by Igor Stravinsky (probably the only mature Stravinsky piece which has never before been commercially recorded), Alexander Gretchaninov (a pupil of Rimsky-Korsakov), and a remarkable work for recorder and two violas by the distinguished American composer William Bergsma.  In addition there are two previously unknown pieces written for John Turner by the late Christopher Ball, and two pieces by John himself, one in homage to Ukraine. A veritable feast of rare music!

John Turner is one of the leading recorder players of today. Born in Stockport, he was Senior Scholar in Law at Fitzwilliam College Cambridge before pursuing a legal career, acting for many distinguished musicians and musical organisations (including the Hallé Orchestra, the Royal Northern College of Music and the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain), alongside his many musical activities. These included numerous appearances and recordings with David Munrow’s Early Music Consort of London, the Academy of Ancient Music, the English Chamber Orchestra, the Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields and the English Baroque Soloists. 

John Turner’s recordings include no less than five sets of the Brandenburg Concertos, as well as the F Major version of Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 with Menuhin and George Malcolm, but lately he has made numerous acclaimed recordings of the recorder’s contemporary concerto and chamber music repertoire, including four solo concerto discs, all of which have received critical acclaim. Some of the most recent (all on the Divine Art and Métier labels) are a recording of music by the novelist and composer (and fellow Mancunian) Anthony Burgess, a disc in memory of Alfred Deller (a good friend) with James Bowman and Robin Blaze, including music by Blow, Handel, Tippett and Fricker, and programmes of music by Roy Heaton Smith, Peter Hope and Jim Parker. In 2020 and 2022 he also produced and performed on two Divine Art albums issued to commemorate and honour the late Sir John Manduell.

In the last few years he has played in Germany, Switzerland, Poland, France, New Zealand, Japan and the USA, and given many recitals on Radio 3 with pianist Peter Lawson. In all, he has given the first performances of over 600 works for the recorder, including works by many non-British composers, including Leonard Bernstein, Ned Rorem, Peter Sculthorpe, Douglas Lilburn, Petr Eben and Ruth Zechlin. Many of the works he has premiered have now entered the standard repertoire, and these and his own recorder compositions are regularly set for festivals and examinations.  Two new works recently published are Three Salutes and A Short Sprint, the latter for the young Japanese recorder player Hidehiro Nakamura.

Highways and Byways (DDX 21245)

Works:

  • Sonatina (Lennox Berkeley)
  • Little Suite (Wilfred Heaton)
  • Sonatina No. 2 (Peter Pope)
  • The Summer Triangle (David Butler)
  • Lullaby (Igor Stravinsky)
  • Sonatina (John Locke)
  • Dancery (Thomas Pitfield)
  • A Sad Pavane (John Turner)
  • Hopscotch (John Turner)
  • Domestic Life (John McCabe)
  • Sam’s Tune (John McCabe)
  • A Cheerful Little Piece (Christopher Ball)
  • Homage to Dvořák (Christopher Ball)
  • The Edgeley Tram (Peter Hope)
  • Edgeley Road (David Jepson)
  • Concertino (Alexander Gretchaninov)
  • Pastorale and Scherzo (William Bergsma)
  • Conversation Piece (Dorothy Pilling)
  • Mount Street Blues (David Ellis)
  • Fipple Baguette (David Ellis)
  • A Little Caribbean (Thomas Pitfield)

John Turner Divine Art Recordings Group Discography