Divine Art is delighted to announce a new collaboration with poet Chinwe D. John to produce an album of songs by two English composers written to reflect our turbulent times and to shine a light of hope for the future.
The album, titled “Songs for our Times”, is the result of a unique collaboration between two leading British contemporary classical music composers, Stuart MacRae and Bernard Hughes, and Nigerian-American poet/lyricist, Chinwe D. John. The classical lyrics, which feature themes relevant to our collective present-day lives, are set to music which is accessible, whilst still retaining its depth. Several universal subjects, including the need for wisdom within the halls of power; transcendent love; an immigrant’s homesickness; the search for inner peace; all flow through the album evoking the spirit of our day and age. Despite our current turmoil, the overall tone of the album is a hopeful one, making it a welcome balm during our turbulent times.
Comprised of two song cycles; Kingdoms by Stuart MacRae and Metropolis by Bernard Hughes, the music is influenced by classical music traditions, as well as genres such as folk and highlife.
The songs are brought brilliantly to life by three internationally renowned artists: Grammy award-winning pianist Christopher Glynn (Artistic Director of the Ryedale Festival), tenor Nick Pritchard (award-winning regular on the opera and concert stage) and rising star soprano Isabelle Haile.
The album was recorded on November 14th and 15th 2022, at St. Jude’s Hampstead, UK, with sound engineer Patrick Allen of Opera Omnia and is scheduled for release on 13 October 2023.
Composers: Stuart MacRae (Kingdoms) is a renowned composer of opera, orchestral, chamber and vocal music. His awards include the South Bank Sky Arts Award for Opera. He is based in his home country of Scotland, where he is a professor of composition at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.
Bernard Hughes (Metropolis) is cited as being one of the leading composers of choral music in Britain. He regularly composes work for the BBC Singers amongst other ensembles. His awards include the William Mathias Prize, the Polyphonos International Prize and the Simon Carrington Chamber Singers Composition Prize.
Pianist: Christopher Glynn (on a Steinway D) is a Grammy award winning classical pianist, and much sought after accompanist, working with most of the world’s renowned classical music artists, on an international scale. He is the artistic director of the Ryedale Festival in North Yorkshire, having taken up the mantle in 2010. Under his leadership, the festival features up to sixty programmes a year.
Tenor: Nick Pritchard is an award-winning versatile tenor, who features frequently with noted ensembles such as the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, the Monteverdi Choir and Orchestra, and L’Orchestre de Chambre de Paris. His recording of Bach’s St John Passion under Sir John Eliot Gardiner was nominated in the 2023 Grammy awards for Best Choral performance.
Soprano: Isabelle Haile is an award-winning Ethiopian-Romanian soprano, who has received her vocal training in Moldova, Italy, and the United Kingdom. She has sung in both operatic and solo recital roles internationally. In 2020, she completed a Masters with Distinction, in Vocal Performance, from the Royal Academy of Music.
Lyricist: Chinwe D. John is a Nigerian-American physician and poet, whose previous work includes a book of narrative poetry ‘Tales of Fantasy and Reality’, and a contemporary classical music EP ‘Within a Certain Time and Place’ released under the Voces8 label. In 2020, in response to the particular challenges facing UK classical musicians, and the need for the genre to expand its audience base, she was inspired to take the steps that would lead to this album project.
Baritone Trevor Alexander and pianist Peter Crockford have joined Divine Art Recordings for an album celebrating English Song – art-songs by composers well and not-so-well known, and some of the best examples of what is often called the Parlour Ballad so beloved of audiences in the early years of the 20th century.
The album, to be released in the late summer, is to be titled “Dreams, Desires, Desolation”. The artists say: “Dreams, Desires, Desolation was created out of our love for English Song. The album comprises a real mixture of very familiar songs, along with some relatively unknown ones, and a few which were very popular in their day but have fallen out of fashion. There are also three world premiere recordings. We believe, despite the mixture of styles, each song brings something valid to our concept.”
Since graduating from Guildhall School of Music and Drama, Trevor Alexander has worked for numerous companies including Royal Opera, English National Opera, D’Oyly Carte and The Royal Shakespeare Company. He has sung many of the standard baritone operatic roles as well as appearing in musicals and cabaret. He has sung in opera productions and concerts all over the Middle and Far East, and his repertoire is extensive and varied.
Peter Crockford studied at the Birmingham School of Music and The Royal Northern College of Music. In his early career he was an accompanist and repetiteur for various opera companies including Glyndebourne. He has travelled the world widely as accompanist and Musical Director/Conductor. He conducted the European Tour of West Side Story and was Assistant to the Musical Director at the Stadt Theater, Freiburg. He continues to pursue a career of coaching and playing in concert.
Dreams, Desires, Desolation
Label: Divine Art
Catalogue number: DDX 21114
Artists:
Trevor Alexander (baritone)
Peter Crockford (piano)
Works:
Is my Team Ploughing? (George Butterworth)
Come to Me in my Dreams (Frank Bridge)
I Hear You Calling Me (Charles Marshall)
Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal (Roger Quilter)
Go Song of Mine (Clive Pollard) – World premiere recording
Do not Go my Love (Richard Hageman)
Silent Noon (Ralph Vaughan Williams)
Remembrance (Howard Keel)
Dream Song (Victor Hely-Hutchinson)
What shall I your True Love Tell? (Frank Bridge)
Love’s Garden of Roses (Haydn Wood)
Autumn (Peter Gellhorn) – World premiere recording
If there were Dreams to sell (John Ireland)
Silver (Cecil Armstrong Gibbs)
The Cloths of Heaven (Clive Pollard) – World premiere recording
German pianist Burkard Schliessmann has been receiving glowing accolades everywhere for his concert performances and recordings, for his virtuosity and also for his individual and highly thought interpretation of the great music from the late Baroque and Romantic eras particularly. Following five previous albums all of which have been exceptionally well received, he is about to embark on a recording of Fantasies by Robert Schumann, a composer with whom his affinity has been well marked, for example these comments on his album ‘At the Heart of the Piano’ –
“A collection of dynamite recordings… his Schumann recordings call for special recognition. An inspiring triumph of faith and art. For yours truly, a nice revelation.”
– Phil Muse (Audio-Video Club of Atlanta)
“To my sustained delight, Schliessmann reveals himself as a Romantic temperament deeply motivated by both intimacy and intuition, sustained by a wholesome and astonishing technical resource… let me assure possible auditors of the miraculous power of spontaneity that permeates these realizations.”
– Gary Lemco (Fanfare)
“… Schliessmann is the best pianist I know at entering the world and expressing the awareness of the German romantics. …”
As well as exceptional performances we can expect phenomenal sound. The recording is to be made in June at Teldex Studios in Berlin in 5-channel Dolby Atmos high-definition audio and will be offered in a rage of digital formats as well as hybrid multichannel SACD.
Burkard Schliessmann is an official Steinway Artist and 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, as well as being an esteemed teacher, with classes all over the world, principally in the USA. He is also a professional scuba diver and an Ambassador for “Protecting our Ocean Planet” – a program of Project AWARE Foundation. Learn more on his website.
British conductor Robin White has brought his hand-picked choral ensemble Alban Voices to the studio to record an album of American Choral Classics including major serious works and iconic folksy ditties! This will be White’s third outing with Divine Art following his album ‘From Russia’ (Divine Art DDA 25223) with clarinettist Ian Scott and the Royal Ballet Sinfonia, and the Christmas digital single ‘Light of the World’, which featured both the Sinfonia and Alban Voices.
The new recording, which also spotlights mezzo-soprano Barbara Naylor in Copland’s ‘In the Beginning’, was made in September 2022 and is to be released worldwide in June.
English pianist Jonathan Phillips has recorded a new album of works by Chopin to follow his “J.S. Bach: Tranquillity” (Divine Art DDX 21102, to be released on May 12). Bach was one of Chopin’s principal influences, especially in the chromaticism and harmonic elements of the inner parts – influences which later informed the styles of Mahler and Wagner among so many others. For this album, Phillips presents the four Ballades together with five of the glorious Nocturnes; he explains his choice of repertoire:
So, to the four Ballades. Why? Why play them and why record them? Well, these four unique compositions capture the essence of Chopin’s output for me. Op 23, Op 38, Op 47 and Op 52, span his lifetime and represent a distillation of the evolution of his musical language. Crucially, I have been aware of them since I was a teenager, when as a 13-year-old I bought a wonderful Classics for Pleasure LP recording of all four Ballades played by Valentina Kaminikova (which I still have somewhere!) I think it fair to say that record together with another record of the Chopin Etudes (played by Samson François) lit the blue touch paper and ignited the rocket fuel required to convert my desire to learn, understand, possess, and recreate Chopin’s extraordinary virile, powerful, muscular, and explosive music. Ultimately, they are a huge challenge, as anyone who has tackled them will know. The motivation for preparing them all to create my own recording of them can be traced back to those adolescent years!
Once again, and critically for me, this recording rather like the Bach Tranquillity CD was made in such a way as to replicate a “live“ performance. Two consecutive live performances were given, and that was it! There is no point in endless editing, as for me, the sanitised performance of a highly edited recording no longer communicates that which takes place in live performance.
Chopin: Ballades and Nocturnes (Divine Art DDX 21111)
Jonathan Phillips (piano)
Works
Ballade No. 1 in G minor, Op. 23
Ballade No. 2 in F major, Op. 38
Ballade No. 3 in A flat major, Op. 47
Ballade No. 4 in F minor, Op. 52
Nocturne in E flat major, Op. 9 No. 2
Nocturne in B major, Op. 31 No. 1
Nocturne in F major, Op. 15 no. 1
Nocturne in F minor, Op. 55 No. 1
Nocturne in B major, Op. 61 No. 1
Total duration approx 64 minutes
Ballades: recorded 8 July 2020 at Wyastone Leys, Monmouth, recording engineer Oscar Torres Nocturnes: recorded on 24 September 2021 at St John the Evangelist, Oxford, recording engineer David Wright Release date: autumn 2023, exact date to be confirmed.
Divine Art Recordings will be releasing a new album by the accomplished virtuoso pianist Alfonso Soldano, containing a program of piano works by Alexander Scriabin. The collection includes one sonata and many of the composer’s more popular Études and other shorter works and is intended to be the first instalment in a Complete Piano Works edition. Scriabin (1872-1915) was in his early career highly influenced by Chopin, composing in a late Romantic idiom but later developed his own very distinctive advanced tonality, becoming one of the most controversial composers of the early 20th century, inspired by synesthesia (association of colours with sound), sensualism and theosophy. Since the 1970s his works have become very well-established and appreciated.
Alfonso Soldano (b, 1986) was one of the most favoured pupils of Aldo Ciccolini. He has won many piano competitions, sits as juror in others and gives masterclasses throughout Italy. He is recognised for his breathtaking virtuosity coupled with a deep sense of the musical spirit of each piece he performs. He is currently Professor of Piano Performance at the Conservatorio U. Giordano in Foggia, Italy and Artistic Director of the Aldo Ciccolini European Arts Academy Foundation in Trani, Italy. (A more extensive biography can be supplied). His previous recordings for Divine Art – of Rachmaninoff, Bortkiewicz and Castlnuovo-Tedesco – have been met with much acclaim.
The album is due to be recorded in Trani soon and is likely to be scheduled for release in the late summer of 2023.
Album details
Title: ‘Enigma’ – Scriabin Piano Works (vol. 1) Label: Divine Art Catalog number: DDA 25243 Artist: Alfonso Soldano Composer: Alexander Scriabin
Divine Art Records adds to its roster of new releases for the first quarter of 2023 with a collection of superb and approachable music by Australian composer John Carmichael, whose overall style can perhaps best be described as neo-Romantic, and which will appeal to a wide audience which may not be keen on the more avant-garde new music. His Piano Concerto, while being totally original, carries definite echoes of Rachmaninov.
John Carmichael was born 1930 in Melbourne, Australia. He studied piano and composition at the University Conservatorium there, followed by two years piano studies with Marcel Ciampi at the Conservatoire National in Paris. Further composition studies followed with Arthur Benjamin and Anthony Milner in London while Carmichael joined the first group of musicians working for the newly established Council for Music Therapy, for whom he introduced music therapy programs at Stoke Mandeville Hospital and Netherden Mental Hospital, Surrey. In 1960 he became musical director of the Spanish Dance group Eduardo Y Navarra touring extensively with them both abroad and in Britain; foreign languages are one of his passions – the latest challenge being Chinese.
The album includes duos, solos, a Piano Concerto (exuberant pianism matched with string orchestra, with a Caribbean flavoured final movement), a Piano Trio aspiring towards the light, works designed to bring the viola, regarded by many as the Cinderella of the string instruments, into the spotlight, a Divertimento for flute, oboe, clarinet & piano; overall a varied collection of works with melodic elements being an important feature. Joining this celebration of the potential in new orchestral and chamber music are many of Britain’s most highly talented artists, including pianist Antony Gray whose recent recordings of Saint-Saëns piano music for Divine Art have attracted glowing praise and are the label’s top sellers of 2022.
Music of John Carmichael (DDA 25240)
Works and Artists:
Piano Concerto No, 2
Antony Gray (piano); St. Paul’s Sinfonia; Andrew Morley (conductor)
Piano Trio “Toward the Light”
Paul Manley (violin); Andrew Fuller (cello); Michael Dussek (piano)
Aria & Finale
Contrasts
Morgan Goff (viola); Antony Gray (piano)
Short Cuts
Susan Torke (flute); Clare Hoskins (oboe); Shelley Levy (clarinet); Antony Gray (piano)
Album duration approximately 74 minutes Recorded in London, summer 2022 Release date to be announced – around February / March 2023
The New Year will see the release of a new album by esteemed American composer and organist Carson Cooman, from Divine Art. The label has issued a number of Cooman’s recordings and is also producing the series of Cooman’s own compositions played by Erik Simmons (currently at volume 15). The Divine Art catalog currently includes 199 of Cooman’s compositions.
On Cooman’s new album ‘Companions’ he presents a program of contemporary music for organ recorded on the remarkable post-romantic Thomas Gaida organ of the Pauluskirche in Ulm, Germany. The album features ten works by nine composers representing six countries. The music varies widely in character and scope, from smaller character pieces and meditations to several dramatic, large-scale works. The final piece is the grand 15th organ symphony of English composer Bernard Heyes.
Carson Cooman (b. 1982) is an American composer with a catalog of hundreds of works in many forms—ranging from solo instrumental pieces to operas, and from orchestral works to hymn tunes. His music has been performed on all six inhabited continents in venues that range from the stage of Carnegie Hall to the basket of a hot air balloon. Cooman’s work appears on over forty recordings, including more than twenty-five complete CDs on the Naxos, Albany, Artek, Gothic, Divine Art, Métier, Diversions, Altarus, Convivium, MSR Classics, Raven, and Zimbel labels. Cooman’s primary composition studies were with Bernard Rands, Judith Weir, Alan Fletcher, and James Willey.
As an active concert organist, Cooman specializes in the performance of contemporary music. Over 300 new compositions by more than 100 international composers have been written for him, and his organ performances can be heard on a number of CD releases and more than 3,000 recordings available online. Cooman is also a writer on musical subjects, producing articles and reviews frequently for a number of international publications. He serves as an active consultant on music business matters to composers and performing organizations, specializing particularly in the area of composer estates and archives.
In the world of serious recorder music, John Turner has been at the top of the tree for many years, as soloist and member of illustrious ensembles including the Academy of Ancient Music, English Chamber Orchestra, and the Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields. He features as the main attraction in ‘The Whistling Book’ – a double CD/digital album to be released worldwide by Divine Art in November 2022.
Most of the works on this double album are included in the Forsyth catalogue of recorder music, and many of them have become standard repertoire pieces for the recorder, known and loved all over the world, and frequently set as test and examination pieces. Alan Bullard’s Recipes, John Golland’s New World Dances, John Turner’s Four Diversions and Robin Walker’s A Book of Song and Dance all fall into this category. The album first appeared on a special release by Forsyth Bros under the title ‘John and Peter’s Whistling Book in 1998; this reissue adds three new items, Robin Walker’s ecstatic and virtuoso Her Rapture for solo recorder, John Addison’s Spring Dances for solo recorder, written for John after a memorable visit to the composer’s Vermont home, and, for the more adventurous, Kokopelli by Richard Whalley, inspired by an American fertility deity, with magical sounds played on a prepared piano by the composer.
John Turner and his piano partner Peter Lawson are both stalwarts of the English music scene and have made substantial numbers of recordings for many labels over the years; Turner appears on 25 current Divine Art group titles and Lawson 6. This album will (re)introduce a host of works epitomising the best in modern recorder music from the UK.
Release date: scheduled for 11 November 2022 Total playing time c. 126 minutes Three works receive their premiere recording – recorded 2021 (Spring Dances and her Rapture) and 2017 (Kokopelli). All other works previously appeared on Forsyth FS001-002, recorded in 1998
Works and Artists:
John Turner (recorder) & Peter Lawson (piano):
Skally Skarecrow’s Whistling Book (Geoffrey Poole)
Following several well-received albums of Simon Mold’s vocal and choral music in recent years, a recording of his Lenten cantata Passiontide for soloists, choir and organ is currently underway in the UK. Premiered in Kent in 2009, Passiontide was conceived as an alternative to Stainer’s Crucifixion, telling the story of Holy Week in the manner of a small oratorio and including several hymns for choir and audience in a nod to the earlier composer’s well-known choral work. Simon Mold has compiled an eclectic libretto that combines some quirky 17th-century metrical Gospel narrative with a variety of choral and solo reflections; the result is a strikingly accessible work that explores a range of emotions with a sure feel for word-setting and an irrepressible tunefulness, while nonetheless capable of many passages of gravitas, poignancy and lingering beauty.
Highlights include dramatic moments in the Garden of Gethsemane and before Pilate, a searching setting of the Reproaches for choir and soloist, the heart-rending farewell duet for Mary and Jesus and a final scene that taps into the feelings of believer and non-believer alike.
The Gospel Narrator is Philip Leech, tenor (Guildhall School of Music and Drama), Jesus is sung by experienced song recitalist Stephen Cooper (Southwell Minster) and the soprano soloist is Helen Bailey (Royal Academy Opera), along with bass-baritone Jeremy Leaman (Loughborough University) as a taunting Pilate. Roxanne Gull (Christ’s College, Cambridge and Lincoln Cathedral) conducts The Knighton Consort made up of choral specialists. The organist is David Cowen (Oxford, Paris and currently Organist of Leicester Cathedral).
Passiontide (duration around 75 minutes is scheduled for worldwide release in February 2023 in time for the Passiontide and Easter season. It consists of 24 sections.
Simon Mold was born in Buxton, UK in 1957, and following success as a treble soloist in the North West of England became a chorister at Peterborough Cathedral under the legendary Dr Stanley Vann. After reading English Language and Medieval Literature at Durham University, where he was a cathedral choral scholar, Simon embarked upon a teaching career principally in the south of England, and sang in several cathedral choirs. Upon retirement from teaching he joined Leicester Cathedral Choir just in time to take part in the acclaimed Richard III reinterment ceremonies in 2015. His interest in composition began at Peterborough where he directed a performance of one of his own choral pieces in the cathedral whilst still a boy chorister. Subsequently Simon’s music has been widely published, performed, recorded and broadcast: for instance his anthem Come, praise the saints, for choir, organ and 3 trumpets was conducted by John Scott in St Paul’s Cathedral, London, and his well-known Candlelight Carol featured in Lesley Garrett’s television series Christmas Voices. Three albums of Simon Mold’s vocal and choral music have been released in recent years, and his verse collection Poetry of the Peak was published in 2019. Simon has also been a regular contributor to various musical and literary magazines, and has written widely on diverse aspects of music, language and literature.
Simon Mold: Passiontide – a Lenten Cantata (DDA 25238)
Artists
Philip Leech (tenor)
Stephen Cooper (baritone)
Helen Bailey (soprano)
Jeremy Leaman (bass-baritone)
The Knighton Consort
Roxanne Gull (conductor)
Dates
Recording dates: April and June 2022 Venue: Mountsorrel Methodist Church, Leicestershire Release date: scheduled for February 10, 2023
Reviews of previous Simon Mold recordings
“Hush Little Child” – Christmas carols by Simon Mold and Antony Baldwin: “Warmly recommended” – MusicWeb International. “Simon Mod;s writing frequently reveals a fresh creativity whilst his settings of the texts are very convincing.”
– Cathedral Music Review
“Simon Mold: Song Cycles: “Mold’s music is unashamedly conservative, finding stylistic parallels with folk-inspired composers such as Vaughan-Williams. Mold’s song settings keep the home fires burning for highly approachable lyrical expression and amply demonstrate an unerring ear for rhythmic stress and a sure sense of converting feeling into sounds.”
– Opera Today
“The Beatific Vision” – Choral Organ Music by Simon Mold and Charles Paterson: “Bravo. There is much to enjoy on this CD. The musical language (of the Mold pieces) is immediately accessible and serves the text admirably.”
Divine Art will be adding another exceptionally talented composer to its roster soon. To be recorded later this year, the new album is a celebration of the chamber music of Devon-born composer Ian Stephens, who has made a name for himself with acclaimed works for choir, orchestra, brass band and small ensemble. A cellist himself, his deep love for string instruments shines through in these five pieces; his music has been described as containing “a fathomless richness of harmony, sumptuous depth of orchestration.”
The world-class Fitzwilliam String Quartet is joined by two outstanding guests, clarinettist Mandy Burvill and oboist Jonathan Small, in recordings of two string quartets, a clarinet quintet, an oboe quintet and a duo for clarinet and cello.
Born in Sidmouth, Devon, Ian studied music at Bristol University, and is based near Liverpool. His music has been performed by ensembles including the Brodsky Quartet, Choir of King’s College Cambridge, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Northern Ballet Sinfonia, Salisbury Cathedral Choir and Brighouse and Rastrick Brass Band, and broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and 4. He is active as a workshop leader, cellist and double bassist, and is a Composition Tutor at Chetham’s School of Music and a mentor for the Rushworth Young Composer scheme.
Fitzwilliam String Quartet: Lucy Russell & Andrew Roberts, violins, Alan George, viola; Heather Tuach, cello
The recording is being done in two sessions, both at Wyastone Leys concert hall in Monmouth. The first is 17-18 December 2022, the second is March or April 2023, to be confirmed.
Following the January 2022 release of the critically acclaimed album of his cello and piano music (DDA 25217), Manchester-based British composer Robin Stevens is currently recording a programme of his chamber music for mixed ensembles, entitled Chasing Shadows. The major work on the disc is Robin’s four-movement Clarinet Quintet, featuring Hallé Orchestra clarinettist Rosa Campos. This piece embraces, in a contemporary idiom, all the sweep and ambition of Brahms’ own famous work in the genre.
The remainder of the album demonstrates Robin’s penchant for writing for unusual and neglected combinations of instruments. His Romantic Fantasy for Harp Septet – employing the same forces as Ravel’s ground-breaking Introduction and Allegro – is a powerfully original composition encompassing an unbroken twenty-minute span. The Fantasy Trio for Flute, Cello and Classical Guitar explores the exciting sonic possibilities latent in this felicitous grouping of instruments, and a further dramatic contrast in timbres is provided by two miniatures for double bass and piano.
This project is blessed with a stellar cast of instrumentalists, including guitarist Craig Ogden, harpist Clifford Llantaff (BBC Philharmonic Orchestra), and Hallé Orchestra principals Amy Yule (flute) and Nicholas Trygstad (cello).
Chasing Shadows (DDA 25236)
Composer Robin Stevens
Works
Quintet for Clarinet and Strings Rosa Campos (clarinet); Sophie Rosa & Rosemary Attree (violins) ; Alistair Vennart (viola) ; Nicholas Trygstad (cello)
Fantasy Trio Clifford Llantaff (harp) ; Craig Ogden (guitar); Nicholas Trygstad (cello)
Obsession
Chasing Shadows Alex Jones (Double Bass); David Jones (piano)
Romantic Fantasy Clifford Llantaff (harp); Rosa Campos (clarinet); Amy Yule (flute/piccolo) ; Katie Stillman & Rosemary Attree (violins); Christine Anderson (viola); Nicholas Trygstad (cello)
Sir John Manduell was a pivotal figure in British music, known for his fluent creative thinking, for his own compositions and for his devotion towards the teaching of music.As the founding Principal of the Royal Northern College of Music he led the college into being a world-leading institution, and is regarded as a most vital inspiration and influence on a great many British composers through his leadership and his pioneering work as a producer at the BBC and in his founding of the European Opera Centre. Indeed, Sir John’s outstanding qualities, character and achievements have been well recorded in the many assessments made during his lifetime and in the many tributes that honour his memory.
In 2020 Divine Art released “Songs for Sir John” – a tribute album featuring works by 16 composers in Sir John’s memory – composers who had been influenced, inspired or encouraged by the great mentor – a wonderfully constructed program of chamber music in its own right, cemented by each work’s connection to Sir John Manduell.
The sequel to that album is ‘The Fabulous Sir John’. Recording has taken place between June and October 2021 in Stockport, England, and the album is scheduled for release in July. This recording includes several pieces by Manduell as well as tribute works by Adam Gorb and Michael Berkeley (whose father Lennox was one of Manduell’s teachers), a piece by Sir John’s close friend and admirer Richard Stoker, and one by Sir John’s other teacher, William Alwyn.
Divine Art and Executive Producer John Turner are grateful for the financial support of sponsors Castlefield Investment Partners LLC and the Ida Carroll Trust, and for invaluable contributions to the programme notes from Kent Nagano and Bryan Fox whose words sum up the feeling of so many musicians: “There is no way of adequately describing someone who superbly filled so many roles; any list would exhaust the available space before encompassing its brief. He was unique, and we are all deeply in his debt.”
Among today’s most gifted pianists, few attract such intense praise and acclamation as Burkard Schliessmann. While not yet perhaps a household name internationally, his concerts and recordings continually receive the most glowing reviews and media attention.
In the last few months alone he has been the subject of special features several times in Fanfare (USA) and International Piano (most recently, a 9-page digital special (2021); and in Pianist UK and Pianist (Germany/Netherlands/Belgium, 2021) and he has garnered a host of awards including three silver medals at the Global Music Awards 2017 and a two Gold Medals as Awards of Excellence in 2018. His Chopin also resulted in Burkard being a finalist in the International Acoustic Music Awards – a fantastic achievement for a classical musician in this pop-driven event. Most recently Burkard was awarded the Goethe Plaque (2019/20) by the City of Frankfurt-am-Main. The Goethe-Plakette is commended to “poets, writers, artists and scientists and other personalities of the cultural life […] who, through their creative work, are worthy of a tribute dedicated to the memory of Goethe.”
Since 2015 Burkard Schliessmann has been recording for Divine Art; following his albums of music by Chopin and Bach, and the recent (September 2021) album ‘From the Heart of the Piano’ which has been incredibly well-received, Divine Art is now to re-issue Schliessmann’s recording of Bach’s ‘Goldberg Variations’, originally released (on physical disc only) by Bayer in 2007.
On its original appearance, this recording was picked as one of MusicWeb International’s Recordings of the Year with comments such as “German pianist Burkard Schliessmann charts new territory in the Goldbergs, characterizing musical phrases like conversations amongst warm, human characters. Far from the flair of young Gould, the serenity of old Gould, the severity of Tureck, or the drama of Perahia, this is the most humane Goldberg I’ve ever heard.” The disc was also included in the Critics’ Choice 2008 by American Record Guide (“Schliessmann’s overall conception and realization of Bach’s last great keyboard work has so much distinction …”).
Scheduled for release in the summer (exact date to be advised) of 2022, this will be a double multi-channel SACD / hybrid stereo CD and will for the first time be available in digital formats including High Definition Dolby Atmos audio and Apple Digital Mastering. High-Definition Audio mastering is taking place in March/April 2022 by Teldex Studios in Berlin, which also produced the original SACD recording in 2007.
Album details:
Label : Divine Art Catalogue number: DDC 25754 Format: Multichannel SACD / Hybrid CD and all major digital formats Artist: Burkard Schliessmann (piano) Album program: J S Bach, Aria with Diverse Variations, BWV 988 (“The Goldberg Variations”) Release date to be announced – between July and September 2022 Original recording 2007 – HD remastering 2022
Divine Art Records is delighted to announce the new album from Andrew Brownell, one of the labels’ latest signings. Titled “Shades of Night” the album is a potpourri of exquisite gems with Romantic overtones though the music ranges from the baroque to the present day.
The pianist explains the ethos of the album:
“Since the invention of artificial lighting, night has been nothing more than that part of the day without sunlight. But before this, night was something altogether more alluring, particularly in the fertile imaginations of Romantic composers. The absence of the sun gave cover of darkness to magic and mystery; it was a time for drunken revelry, passionate love, and encounters with the supernatural.”
Shades of Night is an eclectic anthology of piano music that explores the theme of the night, from well-known works like Beethoven’s “Moonlight” Sonata or Chopin’s Nocturnes, to lesser-known pieces from the French Baroque and 20th-century America. Debussy’s sounds and perfumes swirl sensuously in the evening air, icy arabesques float over hypnotic melodies in a nocturne by Liebermann, and a forbidden affair angers the gods in a heated tableau by Schumann. For most of human history, the night was a strange and mysterious time. Take a journey through its many hues with Shades of Night.
Andrew Brownell, a native of Portland, Oregon, was the first American pianist ever to win a prize in the International J S Bach competition (in 2002) and he is renowned for his creative programming and interpretive insight. Musical Opinion has described him as “potentially one of the most significant pianists of his generation”. He performs internationally and has appeared as soloist with major orchestras such as the Hallé and Royal Liverpool Philharmonic and his performances have been broadcast on BBC TV and radio, Classic FM, NPR (USA) and several European stations. He earned his doctorate at the Guildhall School of Music, London. He is now (since 2017) a member of the faculty of the Butler School of Music at the University of Texas.
Shades of Night (DDA 25233)
Piano Sonata (Moonlight), Op. 27 No.2 – First movement, Adagio sostenuto (Ludwig van Beethoven)
Nocturne in D flat, Op. 27/2 (Fryderyk Chopin)
Suite 1922, Op. 26 – Nachstuck (Paul Hindemith)
Preludes Book 1 – Les sons et les parfums… (Claude Debussy)
Le Rossignol en amour (From 14ème Ordre) (François Couperin)
Nocturne No. 5 in D major, Op. 55 (Lowell Liebermann)
Double de Rossignol (from 14ème Ordre) (François Couperin)
Out of Doors – Musique Nocturne (Bela Bartók)
Nocturne in C minor, Op. 48/1 (Fryderyk Chopin)
Fantasiestücke, Op. 12 – In der Nacht (Robert Schumann)
Nocturne, Op. 33 (Samuel Barber)
Sonata No. 3 in F minor, Op. 5 – 2nd movement, Andante (Johannes Brahms)
Suite bergamasque – Clair de lune (Claude Debussy)
Recorded in London 19-21 October 2015; Recording engineer Michael Ponder.
Release date to be confirmed but between July – October 2022
English harpsichordist Gilbert Rowland is preparing the third volume in his ongoing series presenting the complete Suites for Harpsichord by Johann Jakob Froberger. The album is to be recorded at Holy Trinity Church, Weston, Hertfordshire on 11-14 July 2022, with engineer John Taylor who produced all of Gilbert’s previous Divine Art and Athene recordings. The first two volumes attracted much praise:
“A glorious sound and enjoyable music recorded in a resonant acoustic, giving a truly luscious sound. Rowland plays with energy and a good forward drive.”
—David Griffel (Harpsichord & Fortepiano) on volume. 1
“One of the finest recordings of Froberger’s harpsichord music I have heard, with a wonderful-sounding instrument and magnificent playing from Rowland.”
—Stuart Sillitoe (MusicWeb International) on volume 1
“Froberger’s music is individual in nature and ground breaking – he was one of the first composers to settle the ‘dance-movement’ style. These are thrilling and authoritative recordings by Gilbert Rowland of wonderful music.”
—John Pitt (New Classics) on volume 2
“Froberger’s music – in this splendid rendition by Gilbert Rowland – reveals huge variety and baroque beauty. Clever, ingenious and melodious engaging and attractive works.”
—Stuart Millson (Quarterly Review) on volume 2
Johann Jakob Froberger (1616-1667) was a highly accomplished composer of the middle baroque and is usually credited with inventing the ‘baroque suite’ used with variations by Bach, Handel and countless other composers; certainly it was his idea to set the ‘backbone’ of the Suite as the four dance movements of allemande, courante, sarabande and gigue. He was extremely prolific and indeed several works (including Harpsichord Suites) have been discovered only recently.
Gilbert Rowland first studied the harpsichord with Millicent Silver. Whilst still a student at the Royal College of Music, he made his debut at Fenton House 1970 and first appeared at the Wigmore Hall in 1973.
His mentors have included Kenneth Gilbert and Fernando Valenti. Recitals at the Wigmore Hall and Purcell Room, appearances at major festivals in this country and abroad, together with broadcasts for Capital Radio and Radio 3 have helped to establish his reputation as one of Britain’s leading harpsichordists.
His numerous records of works by Scarlatti, Soler, Rameau and Fischer have received considerable acclaim from the national press. The recording of the 13-CD set of Soler sonatas with Naxos was completed in 2006. He also recorded a CD of Sonatas by Albero for London Independent Records, which was released in 2009. He joined Divine Art in 2010 to record the harpsichord suites by Handel, followed by those of Froberger and Mattheson. Gilbert Rowland is assigned to Divine Art’s specialist early music label, Athene.
J. J. Froberger: Suites for Harpsichord, Volume 3 (ATH 23213)
When favourite versions of two favourite works are supplanted by performances in the same recording, you know it has to be something special. The Babadjanian trio is given a reading of such passion and energy, and the raw intensity of the Piazzolla made me rethink how it should be performed.”
Acclaimed and prolific violinist Peter Sheppard Skærved is in full flow with six recording projects underway including contemporary music, ancient works continuing his ‘Great Violins’ series for Divine Art, and more. On this new album he presents the brilliant set of six sonatas for piano and violin D.301-306 by Mozart, with the equally talented and critically praised pianist Daniel-Ben Pienaar.
Peter Sheppard Skærved & Daniel-Ben Pienaar
In 1778 Mozart dedicated this set of six sonatas to the piano-playing Electress Elisabeth of the Palatinate. These extraordinary pieces, mark the beginning of his cycle of mature works for piano, accompanied by violin. This is a dazzlingly colourful, drama-filled, and emotional set of pieces, ranging from the concertante brilliance of the D Major, originally conceived as a concerto for the two instruments, to the sublime melancholy of the E minor, famously Mozart’s only work in this key.
Both of the artists are acclaimed for recording large-scale cycles from the 17th to 19th centuries. After years of collaboration, public and private, this recording is their long-awaited first disc together, and the first of their traversal of the Mozart set. These highly adventurous recordings were conceived in the spirit of conversation: the artists are inspired by the fact that this is music written for the salon, for the drawing room, for the home, and this informs their approach. They both play sitting down, sitting close to each other, enabling the lines and colours to intertwine, rather than be projected in ‘large-scale’, concert-hall fashion. The results are far from domestic – this approach enables refined rubati and shapings, whip-lash changes of direction and bubbling speeds, not unlike the talk of friends at table.
Mozart: The Palatinate Sonatas ATH 23212
W.A. Mozart: Sonatas for Piano with Violin
K. 301 in G major
K. 302 in E flat major
K. 303 in C major
K. 304 in E minor
K. 305 in A major
K.306 in D major
Recorded in 2021: Engineer: Adaq Khan
Peter Sheppard Skærved is known for his pioneering approach to the music of our own time and the past. Over 400 works have been written for him, by composers Laurie Bamon, Judith Bingham, Nigel Clarke, Robert Saxton, Edward Cowie, Jeremy Dale Roberts, Peter Dickinson, Michael Finnissy, Elena Firsova, David Gorton, Naji Hakim, Sadie Harrison, Hans Werner Henze, Sıdıka Őzdil, Rosalind Page, George Rochberg, Michael Alec Rose, Poul Ruders, Volodmyr Runchak, Evis Sammoutis, Elliott Schwartz, Peter Sculthorpe, Howard Skempton, Dmitri Smirnov, Jeremy Thurlow, Mihailo Trandafilovski, Judith Weir, Jörg Widmann, Ian Wilson, John Woolrich and Douglas Young.
Peter’s pioneering work on music for violin alone has resulted in research, performances and recordings of cycles by Bach, de Bériot, Tartini, Telemann, and, most recently, his project, ‘Preludes and Vollenteries’, which brings together 200 unknown works from the seventeenth century, from composers including Colombi, Lonati, Marini and Matteis, with the Wren and Hawksmoor churches in London’s Square Mile.
His work with museums has resulted in long-term projects at institutions including the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC, the Metropolitan Museum, New York City, the Victoria and Albert Museum, the British Museum, Galeria Rufino Tamayo in Mexico City, and the exhibition ‘Only Connect’, which he curated at the National Portrait Gallery, London. Most recently his ‘Tegner’ commissioned by the Bergen International Festival, is a close collaboration with the major Norwegian abstract artist, Jan Groth, resulting in a set of solo Caprices, premiering at Kunsthallen, Bergen, and travelling to galleries in Denmark, the UK and even Svalbard/Spitzbergen. Peter is the only living violinist to have performed on the violins of Ole Bull, Joachim, Paganini and Viotti. As a writer, Peter has published a monograph on the Victorian artist/musician John Orlando Parry, many articles in journals worldwide, and most recently, Practice: Walk, for Routledge.
Daniel-Ben Pienaar has garnered an international reputation for his unusual musicianship. He has a particular interest in early music, Bach, the Viennese classics and early Romantics, and is especially noted for his substantial discography. He is an elected Fellow of the Royal Academy of Music in London, and currently its Curzon Lecturer in Performance Studies. He has been a member of the Royal Academy of Music teaching faculty, assuming a variety of roles, since 2005. In addition to doctoral supervision his teaching has included elective courses on Bach, on Mozart, on Schubert and on Piano Sonatas (1778-1854), running an interpretation seminar for master’s degree students with cellist Neil Heyde and curating a series of repertoire and performance practice workshops for postgraduate pianists. Public talks on a wide range of performance-related topics are also a regular feature of his Academy work, including an on-going series ‘Listening to Recordings’. His discography is very extensive and as well as several albums for Avie and Deux-Elles, he has recordings of Byrd, Haydn and Bach awaiting release.
The following comes from fellow Divine Art composer John Turner:
Gordon Crosse (1 Dec 1937 – 21 Nov 2021)
Gordon Crosse was born in Bury, Lancashire, where his father worked for the Midland Bank, on 1st December 1937. Though plagued by illness for much of his life (see Crosse’s own notes, appended to this article) his father was a talented amateur pianist, organist and cellist, as well as an ingenious amateur inventor and engineer. The family moved to Cheadle Hulme when his father was transferred to the Bank’s Cheadle Branch, and Gordon attended Cheadle Hulme School, whose other musical alumni have included the composer Peter Hope and the announcer and Strictly contestant Katie Derham, as well as the broadcaster Nick Robinson – a distinguished roll call indeed! Crosse wrote A Cheshire Man for performance at the School for Peter Hope’s 90th birthday, but alas the pandemic forced cancellation of that concert, among many others.
Crosse gained a first class degree in Music from St. Edmund Hall Oxford, where his tutors included Wellesz, in 1961, and he then went to Rome on an Italian Government Scholarship, where he attended Petrassi’s classes at the Accademia di Santa Cecilia. On his return he worked briefly for the WEA and researched early fifteenth century music. He was appointed Haywood Research Fellow at Birmingham University, a post he held from 1966 to 1969. His colleagues and friends at Birmingham included both Peter Dickinson and David Munrow, and in memory of the latter he was later to write a beautiful elegy, Verses in Memoriam David Munrow, and subsequently A Wake Again. He was snapped up by the Oxford University Press as a house composer shortly after his Oxford degree, his first publication being Two Christmas Songs, to Latin texts, in two parts, for female voices, which were published by the Press in 1963. Other works from this early period included Three Inventions for flute and clarinet, a first (of two) violin concertos (Concerto da Camera), Villanelles for chamber ensemble, and Corpus Christi Carol for soprano, clarinet and string quartet
His Opus 1 was actually a first Elegy For orchestra (performed by the Halle in April 1962 at Manchester’s Free Trade Hall under Maurice Handford in an SPNM open rehearsal concert). Within a very short time, his works were being regularly commissioned and performed to great acclaim – works such as the oratorio Changes, Ariadne for oboe and small ensemble, and the orchestral song cycles For the Unfallen, and Memories of Night: Morning. A strong literary bent became quickly evident in his music, the words of these last two cycles being by the poet Geoffrey Hill and the novelist Jean Rhys respectively. Gordon’s fellow Mancunian and great friend Alan Garner (he of The Weirdstone of Brisingamen) wrote the text for two works for children, the mini-operas Potter Thompson and Holly from the Bongs. This friendship was later celebrated many years later by Gordon’s Chimney Piece, for recorder, clarinet and viola, performed in the enormous fireplace in part of Alan Garner’s medieval home, the Medicine House (re-erected by the author next to his original cottage, Toad Hall). It was written in fulfilment of a long-standing promise, for Alan’s eightieth birthday.
Gordon’s other principal literary collaborator was the Poet Laureate Ted Hughes, with whom he wrote the popular children’s cantata Meet my Folks and the children’s cantata The Demon of Adachigahara. Hughes also provided the translated libretto for his opera The Story of Vasco.
Another literary connection was with the Royal Exchange Theatre Director Michael Elliott, who commissioned from him incidental music for productions at the theatre, notably Philoctetes by Sophocles (the beautiful Lullaby from which was later rearranged as Lullaby – TBP His Goodnight as a tribute to his fellow Mancunian composer Thomas Pitfield on his eightieth birthday). His last incidental music was for the Granada television production of King Lear, in which I had to play, in full costume, a gemshorn part. I also lent my medieval harp for the recording. Being rather short sighted I pinned my enlarged music to the costume of the performer in front, but I need not have worried. Laurence Olivier (everyone referred to him, solicitously, as Sir), could not remember more than about two lines at a time, so Lear’s death scene was constructed of innumerable tiny snippets joined together. As a result the players were in vision for merely a second or two, much to my chagrin. The DVD is still available.
One of the first operas performed at the newly formed Royal Northern College of Music was Gordon’s 1966 opera Purgatory, on a short play by Yeats (it was paired with Walton’s The Bear). The first Principal of the RNCM was John (later Sir John) Manduell, whom he had known well since Birmingham days, when Sir John was in charge of BBC radio 3 output there. They had travelled to Warsaw together to listen to music by Penderecki and other . Later operas were The Grace of Todd (for the English Opera group, Aldeburgh, 1969) and The Story of Vasco (Sadlers Wells, 1974, though started in 1968), but the latter was not a success. Some of the music was reworked for the orchestral Some Marches on a Ground (1970). Ballet also figures in Gordon’s output. Young Apollo, for The Royal Ballet, extended Britten’s short fanfare for piano and strings into a full-length ballet. Playground, (also for The Royal Ballet) was an arrangement of material from his children’s opera Potter Thompson, and Wildboy was arranged for orchestra for the American Ballet Theatre, with Baryshnikov in the title role.
The Aldeburgh music scene very much appealed to Gordon, as he had always greatly admired the music of Benjamin Britten. Gordon in fact met his wife Elizabeth Bunch in the porch of Orford Church during an Aldeburgh Festival. Her parents had retired to a cottage in nearby Walberswick, and Gordon and Elizabeth bought a rambling house in Wenhaston, near Blythburgh. He and Elizabeth, who succumbed to cancer in 2011, had two sons, both of whom became distinguished in their respective businesses. Jo is a motor cycle engineer, specialising in BMS motor cycles. Gabriel is a highly respected events stager, for political conferences, music festivals and the like. Almost certainly Britten’s own many works for children were an inspiration for Gordon’s own pieces for children, among which were Meet my Folks (premiered in 1964 at the Aldeburgh Festival), The Demon of Adachigahara for Shropshire schools, and Rats Away. A late work for children was A Chethams Suite for String Orchestra (2019), composed for the Junior Orchestra of Chetham’s School in Manchester.
He had always found it difficult to write to deadlines, and a slew of bad reviews, mostly unwarranted, resulted in “the silence”. In particular, the poor reception of The Story of Vasco, his Trumpet Concerto, written for and premiered at the Proms by Hakan Hardenberger, and a fiasco over Sea Psalms, with an uncompleted premiere and inaccurate parts, commissioned for Glasgow as City of Culture, were all setbacks, and eventually prompted a change of career. He became a computer programmer, writing programmes for Cadburys and others. He frequently told me that this work utilised the same brain cells as composition. But it certainly did not need the same imagination, and I regularly pestered him to get back to the music.
Along with his composing, Gordon had several academic posts, at Essex University, Kings College Cambridge (where he was a Visiting Fellow), The University of California Santa Barbara (where he joined on the staff his fellow Brit Peter Racine Fricker), and the Royal Academy of Music in London.
Elizabeth died of cancer in 2011. He found solace in attending the Quaker Meeting House in Leiston. Through his connections there he met the poet Wendy Mulford, who became his companion in his later years. Together they purchased a house on the shores of Papa Westray, the northern-most the Orkney Islands, and this resulted in several works inspired by the local landscape and wildlife. For me he wrote the last of his concertante works for solo wind instruments (a project inspired by Nielsen’s unfulfilled ambition to write a concerto for all the instruments in the woodwind family), On the Shoreline. The piece, written in just a few days, is based on the cries of fulmars and sanderlings outside their window. The others, following on from his early success with Ariadne (now a standard piece for oboists) were Thel for flute, Wildboy for clarinet (later revised for Psappha as L.Enfant Sauvage), Gremlins for bassoon, and Ceili De for horn.
The silence was finally broken in 2008, when he had retired from computer programming. I persuaded him to write a work for the eightieth birthday of his old friend Sir John Manduell. This was a cycle of songs to words by another favourite author, Rudyard Kipling. The initial impetus was a setting of Gertrude’s Prayer, originally composed in 1988 for the first BP Peter Pears Singing Competition, which he now arranged for soprano, recorder, oboe, violin and cello, an ensemble used in the celebrations, and scored for also by Manduell himself, Edward Gregson, Philip Grange, Sally Beamish, Elis Pehkonen, David Beck and Anthony Gilbert. The other songs in the cycle (Three Kipling Songs) were L’Envoi and Four Feet (in which my recorder imitates a dog-whistle – Gordon and his sister Peggy were both great dog-lovers). The cycle was premiered in Bowness (two of the songs) and London (with the addition of L’Envoi) in 2008.
Then the flood gates opened. There followed in quick succession a Fantasia on “Ca’ the Yowes” for recorder, strings and harp, Brief Encounter for recorder, oboe d’amore and strings and a Trio (Rhyming with Everything) for oboe violin and cello. This last piece takes its title from a poem inCarol Ann Duffy’s collection of love poems “Rapture” and explores romantic passion. It quotes from a well-known song by Henry Carey, which was frequently sung by Gordon’s friend Peter Pears, whose rendition was much admired by Gordon. He wrote: “The Summer and Autumn of 2009 was the most exciting and productive period I have ever experienced. I had returned to composing after a break of some 18 years and I found I couldn’t stop working. The music was simpler than it was in 1990 but I think more communicative because more concentrated and focused.“
After that the flood became a torrent with a third Elegy: Ad Patrem, in memory of his adored father (see the appended note), The Barley Bird for a festival in nearby Beccles (conducted by another Suffolk resident Elgar Howarth), three more symphonies, three piano sonatas, five new string quartets (one for the 150th anniversary of the Meeting House in Leiston), a viola concerto (drawing material from the earlier trumpet concerto) and a host of shorter instrumental and choral pieces for friends and colleagues, mainly written just for pleasure. It is a treasure trove for future exploration. His stated aim was to strive for “a blend of elegance and passion that I always try to achieve in my own music, though I succeed but rarely.” Very frequently, others would say. His last piece was Déploration, in tribute to his late friend Peter Maxwell Davies. He told me, with his wry sense of humour, how sorry that he had not managed to get round to writing one for himself!
In conclusion, I should mention how my own friendship with Gordon started. I had known of him through a clarinet playing schoolfriend who was studying nuclear physics at Oxford, Alec Hill, and who was one of the first members of Cornelius Cardew’s Scratch Orchestra. Alec knew both Gordon and the composer Bill Hopkins at Oxford, and had a manuscript copy of his duets for flute and clarinet, which we played through. A few years later, with my legal hat on, I was frequently instructed to prepare wills for staff and customers of the Midland Bank, and I was introduced to a certain Percy Crosse, who lived in Davenport, Stockport, not far from my old school. On enquiring if he was any relation to the composer, I was told that he was his father, and he in turn introduced me to Gordon. Percy, with his engineering skills, made me one of the first electronic metronomes, which I still have and use. It remains a treasured possession! And of course I treasure the many pieces that Gordon wrote for me. His late Three Twitchings for recorder and piano were dedicated to “John Turner, who helped raise me from the dead”. I am proud of that!
Addendum
Composer’s note on Ad Patrem (as yet unperformed)
My father, Percy Broughall Crosse. was born September 2nd 1907 in Ambleside – then in the county of Westmorland. He died in Sept 1987 and his life seems to me inspirational as a model of tragedies and frustrations borne and overcome by sweetness of character and extraordinary determination. He was an exceptionally intelligent man who in the normal course of events would have gone to university to study engineering – but his father died when he was 16, his mother could not handle the financial difficulties and he had to start work in the bank – the Midland at Bowness. Engineering became a hobby along with Music at which he was very gifted. He played piano, organ and cello. I am quite ashamed that as a professional musician I never began to achieve his high standards as a performer. The bank moved him to Fleetwood in Lancashire where he met and married Marie Postlethwaite my mother. He was then moved to Bury, Lancashire, where I was born in 1937. It was typical of his character that the banking career that had been forced upon him was pursued with the full energy and commitment he brought to everything and he seemed destined for a high position.
All such hopes were destroyed after 1939 – not just by the outbreak of war but by the beginnings of a “Arthritic” disorder that was eventually known as Ankylosing Spondylitis but was not diagnosed correctly for many years. He was drafted into the RAF despite this and after working in Radar he was invalided out within the year. At this point he was moved to a slightly less busy branch in Cheadle, Cheahire and we moved to the village of Cheadle Hulme. While trying to return to work in the bank he suffered from medical mismanagement including two years in hospital with hip plaster and undergoing traction. When I tell medical friends of this they are horrified. By the end of the war he had locked hip joints and a rigid spine and needed to walk with two sticks. He had also been forced to leave the bank and needed an income for his enlarged family – my sister Peggy was born in 1944. His engineering skills were called on and he did many small contracts manufacturing demonstration and advertising items. His home workshop grew and the weight of lathes, milling machines and drills threatened to drop through the attic floor. So we moved again – to Stockport where his workshops could occupy the whole of the basement area. He got a job with a local engineering firm – working from home as a Model Engineer and I recall in particular his working scale model of a Baum Coal Washery Plant that took three years to build. My modest contribution was the regular cutting to length of batches of rivets, and helping to pick up from the floor the small items that he continually dropped and was unable to bend and retrieve.
There was no end to his ingenuity in overcoming his disability – the word “Can’t” didn’t seem to exist. Motor cars were modified, stairlifts built and he had the ability to repair almost any household item – from a watch to a radio. Meanwhile he kept up his musical interests – making a tower of cushions and small stools on top of the piano stool so he could continue to play Chopin, and building amazing hi-fi systems with huge speakers in concrete pipes to play his beloved Wagner records.
Mother died suddenly and unexpectedly in 1981 and dad’s retirement was pretty lonely, though he remained amazingly cheerful and forward looking. He never stopped making things (usually some electronics project or other) until glaucoma killed his eyesight. Then with the realism and practicality he always showed he decided to sell our house and moved into a home while he was still capable of organising things. Only in the last few weeks when he suffered blood-poisoning and became halucinatory did he lose the ability to think clearly. His final days in hospital were typical – finding his bedside chair too uncomfortable he analysed the problem and proposed the solution. His last words to me were “I must do something about that”. The philosophy of his whole life. At every reverse or disaster he thought of the way ahead.
Perhaps only music can express my feelings about the man. He was the kindest and most encouraging of fathers and I always felt I was composing specially for him. After his death it was harder and harder to have any enthusiasm for writing. But now, over twenty years later I finally feel up to it. The result is this third orchestral elegy – a single movement like the previous two. Written for a small orchestra with single wind, few strings and very little percussion. In this Elegy the Harp is prominent.
Ad Patrem – Elegy Number Three for Small Orchestra (2009)
have built the piece around the places where he lived. Each place name providing a key. Ambleside – A major/minor. Fleetwood F major/ minor. Bury B-flat and Cheadle Hulme C major and B minor. Finally Stockport in E-flat. Father’s tastes were essentially simple, direct and conservative so I have tried to keep my language tonal and direct as well. It is also rather pictorial and includes references to several of Father’s favourite composers – notably the fateful rhythm of Siegfried’s Funeral March which comes in every section, and pieces like Chopin’s F minor Fantasy and Debussy’s First Arabesque both of which he used to play to me when I was a child. Finally, I have based most of the material on a song I wrote recently; a setting of “Fear No More The Heat O’ the Sun”.
First Ambleside – misty dawn, wisps of fog over Loughrigg, distant horns on the fell. Father was an athletic and sporting young man and here I imagine him hastening to school with a simple tune that acquires some “learned” counterpoints. Then the blow of fate and disorder.
Fleetwood – Seaside,,the remembered sound of the Isle of Man boats and their fog horns. There is no Midland Bank now so the notes HSBC are used. The rhythm of Marie Postlethwaite leads quickly to Wedding Bells.
Bury – Back amongst moorland hillsides but in Industrial Lancashire. So the “wisps of fog” are now smog and haze. At the climax of this section the Funeral March rhythm shatters distant recollections of the “Schoolhouse” tune of the first section.
We then move to Cheshire via the “Souling” song and in Cheadle Hulme Father patiently re-invents himself with a fugal treatment of the Schoolhouse tune and my sister pEGGy appears.
The final Stockport section extends my Shakespeare Setting and for the third time the “wisps” of fog reappear – this time to represent the mental fogs of Blood Poisoning. The end is serene – as father was nearly all his life.
There was much activity over the weekend of 5/6 November at the Church of St John the Evangelist in Oxford, for the recording of a new album of ballet music by Prokofiev, transcribed for clarinet and piano – all first recordings of these versions. While some are brand new arrangements by clarinettists Ian Scott and Malcolm McMillan, others were prepared by Br. Prorvicha in 1935 (Romeo & Juliet) and 1945 (Cinderella).
The clarinet soloist is Ian Scott, whose very recent release ‘From Russia’ (DDA 25223, September 2021) is attracting much interest and regular radio play.
Ian Scott explains:
“It was in the orchestra pit during a run of Prokofiev’s Cinderella ballet that I came up with the idea of recording the suites from Cinderella and Romeo & Juliet arranged for clarinet and piano. Two suites had been arranged for clarinet many years ago in Russia and I set about expanding those movements with the help of my producer and fellow clarinettist Malcolm McMillan, who sat next to me in the pit for fifteen years. The lion’s share of the solos in these ballets in their original orchestral format are played by the clarinet, some achingly beautiful and some quirky and amusing, so I felt justified in presenting this unique version.”
The recording will be scheduled for release in the late spring/early summer of 2022.
Ian Scott is the principal clarinet of the Royal Ballet Sinfonia, having previously held the same post with the Gulbenkian Orchestra in Lisbon. Born in Perth, Scotland, he studied initially with Charles Maynes, then with Henry Morrison at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama, subsequently journeying to the University of Arizona to study with leading British clarinettist John Denman. He has been a guest principal with major London orchestras, and appeared as soloist with I Solisti Veneti and the Orchestra da Camera in Padova, as well as the Gulbenkian Orchestra on tour in the Far East. He has previously recorded British clarinet concertos for ASV White Line and Dutton Epoch, the latter including world-premiere recordings of Leighton Lucas and Humphrey Procter-Gregg concertos and most recently an album of Russian music for Divine Art.
Jonathan Higgins is Principal Pianist of Birmingham Royal Ballet. He made his Royal Opera House debut in 1993 performing with BRB in Concerto and has since returned to perform numerous times with the company. He made his Royal Ballet debut in 2010 playing in Concerto and has since returned to play in Rhapsody for The Royal Ballet. Higgins studied at Cambridge University and the Royal College of Music, winning all the major piano prizes. He subsequently pursued a freelance career making several BBC radio broadcasts and giving Prom performances of Bartók’s Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion (1984) and Stravinsky’s Les Noces (1987). He first worked in ballet in 1983 and joined Sadler’s Wells Royal Ballet (later BRB) in 1987, becoming Company Pianist in 1990 and Principal Pianist in 1995. Since 1999 Higgins has taken part in the summer festival in Neuchatel, Switzerland, giving solo and chamber recitals.
Prokofiev: Cinderella and Romeo & Juliet – Ballet Suite (DDA 25232)
Cinderella, Ballet Suite, Op. 87
The Dancing Lesson / The Winter Fairy/ Passepied / Adagio (arranged by Prorvicha)
Oriental Dance / Kubishka Variation
Summer Fairy / Grasshoppers / Spring Fairy
Dance of the Cavaliers / Grand Waltz (arranged by Scott/McMillan)
Romeo & Juliet, Ballet Suite, Op. 64
Entrance of Juliet / Masks
Dance of the Knights / Mercutio (arranged by Prorvicha)
Dance of the girls with lilies / Gavotte
Scene / Adagio dramatico
Letter Scene / The Nurse (arranged by Scott/McMillan)
Recorded on 5/6 November 2021 at St John the Evangelist, Oxford, England