In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.
Ralph Vaughan Williams: Valiant for Truth
Valiant for Truth
Ralph Vaughan Williams: Symphony No. 5 in D major
I. Preludio: Moderato
II. Scherzo: Presto misterioso
III. Romanza: Lento
IV. Passacaglia: Moderato
Ralph Vaughan Williams: The Pilgrim Pavement
The Pilgrim Pavement
Ralph Vaughan Williams: Hymn Tune Prelude on Song 13 by Orlando Gibbons (arr. H. Glatz)
Hymn Tune Prelude on Song 13 by Orlando Gibbons (arr. for string orchestra)
Ralph Vaughan Williams: The Pilgrim's Progress: The Twenty-third Psalm (arr. J. Churchill)
The Pilgrim's Progress: The Twenty-third Psalm (arr. for soprano and chorus)
Ralph Vaughan Williams: Prelude and Fugue in C minor (version for orchestra)
Prelude
Fugue
2010
“This is an exceptionally powerful yet deeply moving account of the Fifth. Aided by glowing, wide-ranging engineering, Hickox's is an urgently communicative reading. The first and third movements in particular emerge with an effortless architectural splendour and rapt authority, the climaxes built and resolved with mastery. The Scherzo is as good a place as any to sample the lustrous refinement of the LSO's response. Hickox ensures that the symphony's concluding bars positively glow with gentle ecstasy: here's a Fifth that can surely hold its own in the most exalted company. Material from The Pilgrim's Progress made its way into the Fifth Symphony and two of the five enterprising couplings here provide further links with John Bunyan's timeless allegory: the 1940 motet for mixed voices with organ, Valiant-for-truth and John Churchill's 1953 arrangement for soprano and mixed chorus of Psalm 23 (originally sung by The Voice of a Bird in Act 4 of The Pilgrim's Progress). The latter receives its finely prepared recorded début on this occasion, as do both The Pilgrim Pavement (a 1934 processional for soprano, chorus and organ) and Helen Glatz's string-orchestra arrangement of the solo-piano Hymn-tune Prelude on 'Song 13' by Gibbons. Which just leaves the Prelude and Fugue, originally written for organ in 1921, but heard here in a sumptuous orchestration.”
Click on any of the works listed above for alternative recordings.