Bax - Tone Poems Volume 2
BBC Philharmonic, Vernon Handley For Bax there were several periods of intense creativity when he committed to paper a variety of works in the form
of piano scores, and orchestrated them when required. Many of the tone poems performed here were conceived in
this fashion, including Red Autumn, which here receives its premiere recording. Originally a solo piano piece, it
was then arranged for two pianos by Bax himself. In 2006 the Sir Arnold Bax Trust commissioned Graham Parlett
to orchestrate the work in Bax’s early period style specifically for this recording. Heard in its orchestral dress it
immediately reveals its family resemblance to the tone poems Nympholept and November Woods, composed round
the same time.
Vernon Handley brings together for the first time three orchestral movements to which the collective title ‘Three
Northern Ballads’ has been given. They date from the late 1920s and early 1930s, breathe much the same
atmosphere, and Handley is keen to promote them as forming a unified, almost symphonic, whole. The first, which
Bax composed and gave the name ‘Northern Ballad’ in 1927, was followed by a second Ballad, orchestrated in
1931. The third, formally entitled Prelude for a Solemn Occasion, appears to evoke a Sibelian musical landscape,
and occupies the same world as the composer’s Sixth Symphony, which followed almost immediately. When Bax
orchestrated the third piece he was taking his usual winter sojourn at Morar, Inverness-shire, and in a letter to a
friend wrote, ‘It suggests an atmosphere of the dark north and perhaps dark happenings among the mists’. The
nature painting in the work certainly calls to mind the wilds of Scotland.
Joining this quasi-symphonic work, in addition to Red Autumn, are three further early tone poems. Into the Twilight
dates from Bax’s first intensive period of composition, the years immediately preceding World War I, and
originated as the prelude to a planned Irish opera, Deirdre. It received only one performance during Bax’s lifetime,
in 1909, conducted by Thomas Beecham. Nympholept which followed was the work in which Bax fully achieved
the impressionistic technique of his first maturity. It suggests the pagan natural world in which Bax was so deeply
interested. The Happy Forest, follows a pastoral short story by Herbert Farjeon, and is an Arcadian evocation much
like Nympholept. It was first performed in 1923 under Eugene Goossens, its dedicatee. | "Vernon Handley (still no
knighthood?) returns to
his exploration of the Bax
tone-poems with this
sumptuous, majestic
collection. Is it me, or are
the sounds he can draw
from orchestras ever
more resplendent? It is
almost as though he
acquires more vigour
with the passing years
and the result here is a
disc that bristles with
energy and excitement.
Marvellous." - Gramophone Magazine |
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