Notes and Editorial Reviews
This disc remains an essential component of any collection of English music.
This is justifiably one of the most famous discs in the Nimbus catalogue. When it was first issued all of the works contained on it were new to CD. It includes the complete orchestral music of George Butterworth, the composer who was regarded as one of the great white hopes of the English Musical Renaissance – Vaughan Williams dedicated his
London Symphony to him – but whose life was tragically cut short during the Battle of the Somme in 1916.
Butterworth is known nowadays principally for his songs. Apart from arrangements of English folksongs, these were mainly settings of Housman from his collection
A
Read more
Shropshire Lad, poems which not only reflect the English pastoral tradition but also commemorate the transience of human happiness. Housman himself hated musical settings of his poetry, but ironically enough his words struck a chime with many composers in the early years of the twentieth century – Vaughan Williams, Somervell and Orr all created song-cycles from his texts. There are a very considerable number of other works inspired by the same material. Butterworth’s settings were incorporated in
two cycles,
A Shropshire Lad and
Bredon Hill, the latter more complex and the former mainly strophic treatments that strike an instant chord. Towards the end of his life Butterworth’s music was tending towards greater depth and his later song-cycle
Love blows as the wind blows (settings of Henley) contains an overwhelming masterpiece in his setting of the otherwise unremarkable poem
Coming up from Kew. His orchestral rhapsody
A Shropshire Lad draws on material from the first song of his early cycle, but develops it in a way that presages greater things to come – masterpieces that were, alas, never realised. It is the only one of his orchestral pieces that does not draw on English folksong for its material. It breathes an undeniable air of the countryside of the Welsh borders. The two
English Idylls are smaller and lighter, but
The banks of green willow develops its folksong material with a surer hand and rises to considerable emotional heights in its comparatively short duration.
Since Boughton’s 1986 recording there have been a number of other discs (including re-releases) of the complete Butterworth orchestral works including performances by Sir Adrian Boult (Lyrita, coupled with miniatures by Howells, Hadley and Warlock), Neville Dilkes (EMI), Sir Mark Elder (on the Hallé’s own label, coupled with works by Delius and Grainger), and Sir Neville Marriner (on a Double Decca with pieces by Elgar, Delius, Vaughan Williams and Warlock). Some of these are more smoothly and assuredly played than here, but Boughton’s performances are packed full of feeling and have plenty of passion. None of the alternatives offer this coupling. The Parry suite was also recorded by Boult (now re-released by Lyrita coupled with his other Parry interpretations). It was also given by Richard Hickox in a 1984 recording which is now only available as part of a five-disc set of his EMI recordings of British music. Hickox also recorded the Bridge
Suite as part of his invaluable complete Bridge cycle for Chandos.
Nevertheless this disc remains very special. Every collector I know has a copy of it in their library. Boughton’s readings, particularly of the Butterworth works, are superb. For these recordings the string complement of the English String Orchestra was expanded to full orchestral size, and the playing of the woodwind in particular is superb. At 5.50 the trumpets peal across the full orchestra with all the heartbreak not only of Housman but also of the lost generation of British artists who were to fall on the Western Front. The violin solo at 7.41 has an unbearable poignancy. At the end the flute solo sounds properly
quasi lontano as marked. Elder with the Hallé is rather slower (over a minute longer), but the closer recording is less atmospheric and there is no sense of distance in the flute solo at the end. Marriner is better recorded but his speeds seem very fast in places – the strings at 4.45 are hardly
tranquillo as marked – and the trumpets at 5.44 are more conventionally triumphant than tragic. Boult is even quicker - he cuts three minutes off Elder’s timing - and the atmosphere is lost in this uncharacteristically rushed performance and very prosaic recording. No, in the complete sets of Butterworth orchestral music Boughton is the conductor who best captures the magic of the scores. For these readings alone, this disc remains an essential component of any collection of English music.
-- Paul Corfield Godfrey, MusicWeb International
Read less
Works on This Recording
1.
Suite for String Orchestra, H 93 by Frank Bridge
Conductor:
William Boughton
Orchestra/Ensemble:
English String Orchestra
Period: 20th Century
Written: 1908; England
Date of Recording: 06/1986
Venue: Great Hall, Univ of Birmingham, England
Length: 20 Minutes 0 Secs.
2.
Banks of Green Willow by George Butterworth
Conductor:
William Boughton
Orchestra/Ensemble:
English String Orchestra
Period: 20th Century
Written: 1913; England
Date of Recording: 06/1986
Venue: Great Hall, Univ of Birmingham, England
Length: 6 Minutes 0 Secs.
3.
English Idylls (2): no 1, Allegro scherzando by George Butterworth
Conductor:
William Boughton
Orchestra/Ensemble:
English String Orchestra
Period: 20th Century
Written: 1911; England
Date of Recording: 06/1986
Venue: Great Hall, Univ of Birmingham, England
Length: 4 Minutes 47 Secs.
4.
A Shropshire Lad by George Butterworth
Conductor:
William Boughton
Orchestra/Ensemble:
English String Orchestra
Period: 20th Century
Written: 1912; England
Date of Recording: 06/1986
Venue: Great Hall, Univ of Birmingham, England
Length: 10 Minutes 21 Secs.
5.
Lady Radnor's Suite by Charles Hubert Parry
Conductor:
William Boughton
Orchestra/Ensemble:
English String Orchestra
Period: Romantic
Written: 1894; England
Date of Recording: 06/1986
Venue: Great Hall, Univ of Birmingham, England
Length: 15 Minutes 27 Secs.
6.
English Idylls (2): no 2, Adagio ma non troppo by George Butterworth
Conductor:
William Boughton
Orchestra/Ensemble:
English String Orchestra
Period: 20th Century
Written: 1911; England
Date of Recording: 06/1986
Venue: Great Hall, Univ of Birmingham, England
Length: 4 Minutes 19 Secs.
Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:
( 2 Customer Reviews )
Butterworth, Parry, Bridge May 10, 2013
By John Mellor (Holywell Flints., United Kingdom) See All My Reviews
"I concur completely with the review of this CD on the ArkivMusic website. I have listened to it several times during the few weeks since it arrived & been charmed by listening to it. I can't recommend it any less than the official reviewer's fulsome review."
Report Abuse
Good Pastoral April 8, 2013
By Andreas v. (Brockville, Ontario) See All My Reviews
"This is a very acceptable collection and adds to my collection of English pastoral recordings. Good but not great."
Report Abuse
Review This Title