Presto News - 31st January 2011Percy Grainger |
![]() 2011 marks the fiftieth anniversary of death of the Australian-born composer and pianist Percy Grainger. Born in the suburbs of Melbourne in 1882 he had an unconventional upbringing being mainly schooled at home by his mother, and developed quickly as a pianist. He came to Europe at the age of just 13 to study in Frankfurt and moved on to London in 1901. Here he combined a busy career as a concert pianist with his interest in folk song collection – a passion which would occupy him for much of the rest of his life. At the outbreak of World War I in 1914, Grainger moved to New York, where he really started to establish himself as a composer and arranger. He became an American citizen in 1918 and lived in the United States for the rest of his life. ![]() Percy Grainger Grainger’s best known works are probably his folksong arrangements but it is important not to dismiss them as mere arrangements as, although he didn’t come up with the main tune for pieces like ‘Country Gardens’ or ‘Molly on the Shore’, the imagination and inventiveness which he demonstrates with elements like ravishing counter-melodies, impressive harmonies, inspired instrumentation and rhythmic variety is remarkable. Indeed, Benjamin Britten (a renowned folksong arranger himself) exclaimed “In the art of folksong arrangements, Grainger is my master!”. However, Grainger’s ability as a composer actually went far beyond these arrangements. He was in many ways ahead of his time, experimenting with compositional techniques like ‘chance’ before composers like John Cage were even born. He wrote a considerable amount of music in a wide variety of styles and since his death it is great to see that his reputation as a composer seems to have been steadily growing. One reason for that is the superb ‘Grainger Edition’ on Chandos Records. They have now reached 19 volumes and the series features much of Grainger’s orchestral, chamber, solo song, solo piano, choral and wind band music. There is some really terrific music on here, all very approachable and distinctive, and some which really deserves to be better known. To mark the anniversary, Chandos have just re-issued those recordings as a 19 CDs set, and with over twenty-one hours of music at a very attractive price it will hopefully further spread the word about the still under-rated composer. As a tribute to Percy Grainger the virtuoso pianist, APR have just issued a 5-disc set of his complete 78-rpm solo recordings, made between 1908 and 1945. As the informative notes point out, Grainger was the most reluctant of virtuosos, always wishing that he would be remembered primarily as a composer, but as these recordings demonstrate his fame as a performer during his lifetime was well merited. These are old recordings, so despite the excellent work of Ward Marston with the transfers, they will appeal mainly to people wishing to explore and understand a little more about Grainger the performer. Chopin, Schumann and Brahms are all well represented, and amongst other composers there are (of course) a number of tracks of Grainger playing his own compositions. In addition to the two important sets mentioned above I’ve also included below three more modest recommendations which will hopefully all serve as good introductions to this fascinating composer. Dame Margaret Price It is with much sadness that I have to report the death of the Welsh soprano Dame Margaret Price, who died at her home last Friday at the age of 69. She will be warmly remembered as a pure, lyric soprano who excelled in Mozart, but also gave some terrific lieder recitals. She recorded for a number of labels but, performing at a time when people like Sutherland and Tebaldi were at their prime, her discography is not as large as it should be. You can browse her currently available recordings here.
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![]() The Grainger Edition Volumes 1-19Chandos's groundbreaking Grainger Edition issued to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the composer's death |
![]() Percy Grainger: Complete Solo 78rpm Recordings 1908-1945Works by Brahms, Chopin, Schumann and a number of othersPercy Grainger (piano) |
![]() Grainger: Jungle Book (and other choral works)John Mark Ainsley (tenor) & David Wilson-Johnson (baritone), Polyphony, Stephen Layton |
![]() Salute To Percy GraingerPeter Pears (tenor), Anna Reynolds (mezzo-soprano) & John Shirley Quirk (baritone), Ambrosian Singers, Wandsworth Boys’ Choir & Linden Singers, Benjamin Britten & Steuart Bedford |
![]() An introduction to Percy GraingerDrawn for Chandos's Grainger Edition this disc does exactly what it says on the cover. |
Chris O'Reilly - chris@prestoclassical.co.uk |
New Releases31st January 2011 |
This is just the pick of the recent releases. The New Releases and Future Releases pages are always available for browsing all the new and forthcoming releases. |
![]() JS Bach: Cantatas & AriasElizabeth Watts (soprano), The English Concert, Harry BicketWinner of the 2006 Kathleen Ferrier Award and the 2007 Cardiff Song Prize, soprano Elizabeth Watts makes her harmonia mundi début in a luminous programme of Bach cantatas and arias, deftly supported by The English Concert, led by Harry Bicket. |
![]() Allegri: Miserere & the music of RomeThe Cardinall's Musick, Andrew CarwoodThe Cardinall’s Musick finished 2010 in a blaze of glory with their Gramophone Recording of the Year award for the last volume of their Byrd Edition. Their eagerly-awaited next disc features music from late sixteenth-century Rome and ranges from Allegri’s Miserere, surely the best-known and best-loved work of this period, to a rarely-performed or recorded oddity. |
![]() Mahler: Symphony No. 5 in C sharp minorLondon Symphony Orchestra, Valery GergievThe penultimate release in Valery Gergiev’s acclaimed Mahler cycle features the composer’s Symphony No 5, recorded at the Barbican in September 2010. Gergiev’s recent releases on LSO Live include an acclaimed disc of works by Ravel. Forthcoming titles include music by Debussy, as well as Strauss’s Elektra. |
![]() Hail, Mother of the Redeemer - Music of Tomás Luis de VictoriaThe Sixteen, Harry ChristophersTo celebrate the 400th anniversary of his death, this brand new recording is devoted to one the great masters of the Spanish Renaissance – Tomás Luis de Victoria. Priest, scholar, mystic, singer, organist and composer – six persons all rolled into one. That is, quite simply, why Victoria is the most outstanding composer of the Renaissance. |
![]() Holst: Orchestral Works Volume 2BBC Philharmonic & Manchester Chamber Choir, Sir Andrew DavisThat The Planets occupies a place at the heart of the English musical repertoire is indisputable, yet much of Holst’s orchestral output is unjustly neglected. Chandos’ series demonstrates that Holst was a composer whose inventiveness and originality was not limited to one work. The series was originally to be conducted by Richard Hickox who sadly passed away in 2009 after completing Volume 1, released to great critical acclaim. |
![]() Mozart: Symphonies Nos. 39 & 41The English Baroque Soloists, Sir John Eliot GardinerSDG is proud to release its first Mozart CD, recorded live at Cadogan Hall. This album made the headlines in 2006 as the UK’s first classical “on the night” recording. CDs were made during the second part of the concert for the audience to take home after the concert. This is the first time this CD is commercially released. |
![]() The Romantic Violin Concerto 10 - Cliffe & ErlangerPhilippe Graffin (violin), BBC National Orchestra of Wales, David Lloyd-JonesHyperion’s Romantic Violin Concerto series reaches its tenth volume, and turns to two composers based in England, and works by them which have lain hidden for decades. This disc provides a fascinating glimpse of musical history and the shifting fashions of the age which made fame such a fleeting thing for so many composers. |
![]() Brahms: Piano Sonatas Nos.1 & 2Alexander Melnikov (piano Bösendorfer)Johannes Brahms was just 19 years old in 1852-53 when he wrote the first two piano sonatas he deemed worthy of publication. In these extended 4-movement compositions he built on the heritage of Beethoven. |
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