Penguin Guide Rosette Winners

Charles Edmund Rubbra (1901-86)

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Rubbra: Symphony No.  3, Op. 49, etc.

Rubbra:

Symphony No. 3, Op. 49

Symphony No. 7, Op. 88


“For some years the Third Symphony was a repertory piece, at least on BBC programmes, but it fell out of favour in the late 1950s. Commentators have noticed a certain Sibelian cut to its opening idea (with woodwind in thirds) but everything else strikes you as completely personal.
There's a whiff of Elgarian fantasy in the fourth variation of the finale. It's been called the most genial and relaxed of Rubbra's symphonies but there's a pastoral feel to many of the ideas, bucolic even, in the same way that there is about the Brahms Second Symphony. Brahms springs to mind in the masterly variations and fugue of the finale, for not long before, Rubbra had orchestrated the Brahms Handel Variations.
Hickox and his players give a very persuasive and totally convincing account of the symphony.
Anyone coming to the Seventh for the first time, particularly in this performance, will surely not fail to sense the elevated quality of its musical thought. Its opening paragraphs are among the most beautiful Rubbra ever penned, and it's evident throughout that this is music that speaks of deep and serious things. This performance speaks with great directness and power. The horn playing in the opening is eloquent and the orchestral playing throughout is of a uniformly high standard. These are magnificent and impressive accounts, and the recording is truthful and splendidly balanced.”
Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010

Penguin Guide

Rosette Winner

Chandos - CHAN9634

(CD)

$16.75

(also available to download from $10.50)

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Rubbra: Symphony No.  9, Op. 140 'Sinfonia Sacra', etc.

Rubbra:

Symphony No. 9, Op. 140 'Sinfonia Sacra'

The Morning Watch, Op. 55


Lynne Dawson (soprano), Della Jones (contralto), Stephen Roberts (bass)

BBC National Chorus & Orchestra of Wales, Richard Hickox

“The Ninth (1973) is Rubbra's most visionary utterance, and its stature has so far gone unrecognised.
(This is its only recording.) Its subtitle, Sinfoniasacra, gives a good idea of its character. It tells the story of the Resurrection very much as do the Bach Passions. There are three soloists: the contralto narrates from the New Testament, while the soprano takes the part of Mary Magdalen and the baritone that of Jesus. Other parts, those of disciples and angels, are taken by the chorus, which also functions outside the action, in four settings of meditative Latin texts from the Roman liturgy or in Lutheran chorales to which Rubbra put verses by Bernard de Nevers. The symphonic dimension is reinforced by the opening motive, which pretty well dominates the work. Its argument unfolds with a seeming inevitability and naturalness that's the hallmark of a great symphony.
Its depth and beauty call to mind only the most exalted of comparisons and it should be heard as often as Gerontius or the War Requiem. This is music of an inspired breadth and serenity and everyone connected with this magnificent performance conveys a sense of profound conviction.
The Morning Watch is one of Rubbra's most eloquent choral pieces. It dates from 1946, and so comes roughly half-way between the Fourth and Fifth Symphonies. A setting of the 17thcentury metaphysical poet, Henry Vaughan, it too is music of substance and its long and moving orchestral introduction is of the highest order of inspiration.”
Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010

Penguin Guide

Rosette Winner

Chandos - CHAN9441

(CD)

$16.75

(also available to download from $10.50)

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

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