The contribution being made by Chandos to the preservation and reassessment of British film music has to be one of the most important projects undertaken by the classical recording industry in the past decade… as with Volume 1, this CD is a must for any Vaughan Williams enthusiast (Music from the Movies)
“Musically, there's some vintage RVW here, especially much of the score for 49th Parallel, which was written alongside the Fifth Symphony. …there's plenty to admire in the BBC Philharmonic's typically full-blooded playing, and Rumon Gamba has the knack of conjuring real atmosphere from the notes on the page.” BBC Music Magazine, November 2004 ****
“Directed by Michael Powell and written by Emeric Pressburger and Rodney Ackland, 49thParallel (1941) was the Ministry of Information's only feature film, its plot of five stranded Nazi U-boat crewmen journeying through Canada to the haven of the then neutral United States – designed, in Powell's words, 'to scare the pants off the Americans and bring them into the war'.
Vaughan Williams's film score was the first of 11 he wrote between 1941 and 1958.
It was a challenge that evidently stoked his imagination, for inspiration runs high throughout this 39-minute sequence fashioned by Stephen Hogger. The unforgettable, nobly flowing 'Prelude' accompanies both the opening and closing titles, and enthusiasts will enjoy spotting thematic and stylistic links with masterworks to come (including Symphonies Nos 5-7 and Second String Quartet).
The present suite from The England ofElizabeth (written in the autumn of 1955 for a British Transport Commission documentary) adds eight minutes to Mathieson's three-movement adaptation (familiar to many from Previn's 1968 LSO account). It is, as annotator Michael Kennedy observes, a splendidly vital and inventive achievement. In the section depicting Tintern Vaughan Williams quotes a theme from his unpublished tone-poem of 1906, The Solent (the tune also crops up in his first and last symphonies), and it's soon followed by a haunting passage for choir alone.
Sandwiched between these two is a partial reconstruction of VW's amiable 1949 score for The Dim Little Island, a 10-minute short commissioned by the Central Office of Information (which also featured the composer in the role of narrator). It borrows heavily from VW's own Five Variants of Dives and Lazarus and even incorporates a verse of that self-same melody sung by a solo tenor.
Rumon Gamba draws a polished and wholehearted response from all involved. The Chandos recording has striking body and lustre; exemplary presentation, too. Very strongly recommended.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010