On Record – Jeremy Huw Williams & Paul Fan: The Blessed Damozel: Songs of Arnold Bax (EM Records)

Jeremy Huw Williams (baritone); Paula Fan (piano) with Theodore Buchholz (cello, Folk Tale)

Sir Arnold Bax
The Blessed Damozel (1906); A Milking Sian; The White Peace (both 1907); Shieling Song (1908); To Eire (1910); Roundel (1914); Parting (1916); Far in a Western Brookland; Folk-Tale; Jack and Jone; When I was One-and-Twenty (all 1918); The Market Girl; Rann of Exile; Rann of Wandering (all 1922); I Heard a Soldier (1924); In the Morning; On the Bridge (both 1926); Watching the Needleboats at San Sabba (1931)

EM Records EMRCD086 [84’55”] English texts included
Producer Jeremy Huw Williams Engineer Wiley Ross

Recorded 11-13 April, 6 May 2022 at Jeffrey Haskell Recording Studio, University of Arizona

Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse

What’s the story?

EM Records continues its coverage of songs by Sir Arnold Bax with a further volume (see also Arcana’s review of the previous volume, From The Hills of Dream by Jeremy Huw Williams and Paula Fan.

What’s the music like?

As is relatively well known, the writing of songs was a preoccupation of Bax earlier on in his composing which had all but ceased by the mid-1920s. Unlike their earlier release, Williams and Fan here focus on songs previously recorded (some of them several times) though it does include a major first recording along with Folk-Tale from the last year of the First World War. Theodore Buchholz does justice to the dramatic climax which emerges out of this latter piece’s sombre rumination, thus making the subtitle ‘Conte populaire’ more than a little tendentious.

That first recording is The Blessed Damozel – not a song or even a scena, but a melodrama or, as Bax described it, ‘‘musical illustration’’ for reciter and piano of the famous poem by Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Melodramas were a frequent occurrence during those early years of the 20th century, though this is its composer’s single example and even that was likely intended as the blueprint for a work with orchestra that failed to materialize. As it stands, the combination of measured yet rarely uneventful speech and piano writing as responds to the text as if ‘caught on the wing’ results in a curiosity well worth hearing. The present account holds the attention and, given the absence of any orchestration, there seems little need for any further recording. Those who are partial to Rossetti should find Debussy’s earlier cantata to be more substantial.

A glance at the listing above confirms the 16 items featured here range widely across the two decades when Bax’s song-writing was in fullest flow. It is not over-much of a generalization to suggest those written up to and including the ‘Great War’ are art-songs in a direct lineage from the composer’s French or German forbears, and those that came afterward are ‘popular’ songs or – as in with Jack and Jone – arrangements of traditional songs written at the behest of specific performers. The (surprisingly?) skittish setting of Thomas Hardy’s On the Bridge was followed with just two songs – Watching the Needleboats at San Sabba forming part of   a James Joyce anthology, masterminded by Arthur Bliss, which failed to benefit this author financially. Orchestral and chamber works were predominant in Bax’s catalogue henceforth.

Does it all work?

It should have done. Those having heard his previous Bax release will know of Jeremy Huw Williams as a devoted Baxian whose occasional misjudgement of expressive nuance is more than compensated for with thoughtfulness and insight. Unfortunately, the highly reverberant sound is inappropriate – to the extent those songs (tracks 5, 13 and 14) whose texts could not be reprinted for copyright reasons are frequently inaudible as recorded. Neither Paula Fan’s forthright pianism nor Theodore Buchholz’s burnished cello playing come through unscathed.

Is it recommended?

It should have been. The booklet is well up to EMR’s customary standards, with its detailed biographical overview by Graham Parlett and notes on each of the songs by Lewis Foreman. Paula Fan’s untimely death, in 2023, should have made this release a more fitting memorial.

Listen / Buy

You can listen to clips from the release at the EM Records website, and purchase options at the Presto Music site. Click on the names to read more about the artists Jeremy Huw Williams, Paula Fan and Theodore Buchholz, and the Sir Arnold Bax Society

Published post no.2,895 – Saturday 21 May 2026

In concert – Platoon presents Caroline Shaw & Andrew Yee @ King’s Place

Caroline Shaw (viola, vocals, keyboard), Andrew Yee (cello)

King’s Place, London
Tuesday 18 May 2026

Reviewed by Ben Hogwood Picture (c) Anja Schüts

Hall One in King’s Place may seat several hundred people, but for the duration of this concert Caroline Shaw and Andrew Yee were flatmates on its stage. Such was the intimacy created through their 75 minutes of music making, it felt as though the audience were eavesdropping on a private musical conversation between close friends.

Shaw and Yee have known each other for many years, a bond celebrated on their collaborative album Or, The Whale, a new release on Platoon. This event was ostensibly the album launch, but the reduced lighting and onstage plants gave a front room aesthetic, showing the album to be something much more intimate and meaningful for the artists to share.

Both Shaw and Yee are comfortable with free improvisation, a quality evident as they completely reordered the published programme. Though on the face of it this was a classical concert the evening had a pleasing ‘genre neutral’ feel. Electronic touches, folk-based rhythms and phrases, Americana and jazz all mixed freely within the sphere of Yee’s cello and Shaw’s viola, not to mention the keyboard, where she manipulated vocal melody and harmony. Here was creative machine learning, applied to music looking as far back in time as it did forwards.

The two played passionately, though at times the quiet dynamic had the audience leaning forward in their seats, keen to catch all the musical whispers from Yee’s feather light string crossing or Shaw’s lightly applied tones. A firmer tone was applied to their own The Light After, a passionate utterance, while both performers combined effectively for music from their collaboration on the score for Moby Dick. Shaw’s Limestone & Felt explored a satisfying combination of North Carolina quilt makers and subtle instrumental accompaniment. Meanwhile there was an extraordinary arrangement of Louange à l’Éternité de Jésus from Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time. Here Shaw replaced the piano part with her own manipulated vocals, a daring move that worked against the odds.

Reaching back into the distant past was Shaw’s In manas tuas, a striking reimagining on solo, manipulated viola of the original Tallis work. Sonically placed at the other end of a vast cathedral, the performance effectively picks out the details of the original with emotionally charged laser beams.

This was a moving ode to friendship, the two performers effectively finishing each other’s musical sentences as we looked on gratefully.

Published post no.2,896 – Friday 22 May 2026

On Record – Duncan Honeybourne: Mist on the Moors: The Piano Music of Reginald Redman (Heritage Records)

Duncan Honeybourne (piano)

Reginald Redman

Mist on the Moors (1926); A Cornish Legend (1922); Arabesque (1923); La Nuit; Lyric Piece; The Mystic Garden; Graceful Dance; Cradle Song; On the Cornish Coast (all 1924), The Lonely Faun (1926); Gossamer (1922); Lullaby for a Kitten; Deep in the Woods (c1923); Children at Play; In Changing Moods; In a Gondola; Venetian Barcarolle (all 1924); Prelude I Vent a travers les Roseaux (Wind through the Reeds), Prelude II Dans la Clairiere des Esprits Follets (In the Glade of the Will-o’-the-Wisps), Prelude III Le Desert au Point du Jour (The Desert at Dawn) (1918); Song of the Fountain (1924); Humoreske (1927); All Through the Night (earlier version, c1927); All Through the Night (later version, c1970)

Heritage Records HTGCD121 [78’24”]
Producer / Engineer Paul Arden-Taylor

Recorded 24 September 2025 at Wyastone Concert Hall, Wyastone Leys, Monmouth

Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse

What’s the story?

Heritage continues its coverage of unfamiliar British music with an album of piano music by Reginald Redman (1892-1972), fastidiously realized by Duncan Honeybourne who himself has been a doughty champion of composers from the UK throughout his professional career.

What’s the music like?

Although active as a musician from his early years, composition frequently took a back seat in Redman’s activities; particularly during 1926-52 when he worked for the BBC in Cardiff then Bristol – eventually becoming its Director of West of England music. A skilled organist and pianist, he was latterly in demand as a conductor of amateur or professional orchestras. His own output comprises operas and ballets, chamber music, and songs including over 60 settings (albeit in translation) of Chinese poetry, on which subject he was a noted authority.

The highlight of this piano collection is the set of Three Preludes written near the end of the First World War and languishing in the archive at Bristol University until the present pianist rediscovered them in 2024. Complementary as a set, their sound-world is brought into focus by the descriptive titles (in French) appended to each one. Hence the simmering agitation of Vent à travers les Rousseaux, capricious agility of Dans la Clairière des Espirits or spatial immensity of Le Désert au Pont du Jour – which latter piece leaves a powerful impression.

If the miniatures that Redman wrote in the early 1920s, mainly for his wife Evelyn Amey, fail to recapture the individuality of those earlier pieces, they are never less than expertly written and evocative of their actual titles. Whether in the disarming whimsy of Lullaby for a Kitten, restrained poignancy of The Lonely Faun, the ominous aura of Mist on the Moor or harmonic subtlety of The Mystic Garden, these are consistently attractive items such as make for ideal encores and they would be worth taking up by other pianists for inclusion in their own recitals.

One of the latest pieces from this time is an appealing arrangement of the Welsh folksong Ar Hyd y Nos, duly heard in counterpoint with the West Country song Admiral Benbow for what became the signature-tune for the BBC’s Western station when it served both regions up until 1936. How revealing Redman should have revisited the Welsh melody in an arrangement just two years before his death; more austere yet no less affecting, while enhanced with a prelude and postlude in music that lingers in the memory long after these three minutes have ceased.

Does it all work?

Pretty much always. Redman was first and foremost one for whom practicality was the key as composer as much as a musician though, that said, the finest of these pieces inhabit a domain never less than personal and which should readily be appreciated as such. Those who respond to their charm can enjoy more of this music via digital downloads available from the Heritage website: the entertaining vignettes of At the Opera and poetic evocations of In Amberley Vale, both of which find the composer writing educational music that feels not in the least didactic.

Is it recommended?

It is. These recordings are as attentive to the letter and spirit of this music as expected from a musician of Honeybourne’s calibre, enhanced by spacious and well-defined Wyastone sound, along with typically informed and informative notes by the pianist. Well worth investigating.

Listen / Buy

You can explore purchase options at the Heritage Records website. Click on the name to read more about composer Reginald Redman and pianist Duncan Honeybourne

Published post no.2,893 – Thursday 21 May 2026

On Record – Mark Padmore, Martha McLorinan, Hugo Hynas, Morgan Szymanski, Nicholas Daniel, Sacconi Quartet: Alec Roth: Chamber Music with Voice (Signum Classics)

Mark Padmore (tenor), Morgan Szymanski (guitar) (A Road Less Travelled); Martha McLorinan (mezzo-soprano), Sacconi Quartet [Ben Hancox and Hannah Dawson (violins), Robin Ashwell (viola), Cara Berridge (cello)] (The Garden Path), Hugo Hymas (tenor) with Nicholas Daniel (oboe) (Other Earths and Skies)

Alec Roth
A Road Less Travelled (2017)
The Garden Path (2013, rev. 2022)
Other Earths and Skies (2010, rev. 2022)

Signum Classics SIGCD971 [61’12”] English texts included
Producer Adrian Peacock Engineer David Hinnitt

Recorded 6,8 & 10 October 2025 at Church of St Anne and St Agnes, Gresham Street, City of London

Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse

What’s the story?

Signum Classics resumes its coverage of Alec Roth (b.1948) with this album of song-cycles, their scoring with guitar, string quartet or oboe confirming the versatility of the composer’s idiom and enabling each to be enjoyed on its own terms or as part of the overall programme.

What’s the music like?

Best known for larger-scale choral works (though his string quartets – recorded by the Allegri Quartet on RTF Classical NI6321 – are well worth anyone’s investigation), Roth has produced a number of song-cycles whose accompaniment can be as crucial as the words in determining the overall expressive trajectory. Each of these works has notable British precedents – Britten or Walton with guitar, Gurney or Vaughan Williams with string quartet, then VW again with oboe – though, in terms of his fashioning a personal response, Roth is definitely his own man.

Performable with guitar and/or string quartet (the former chosen here), A Road Less Travelled sets (whole or in part) 12 poems by Edward Thomas – though the title is actually the title of a poem by Robert Frost, the American poet who had encouraged Thomas to develop his poetic muse. Pivoting around an instrumental Interlude, the settings in this ‘solo cantata’ are mainly brief while strongly evocative of a mood shared by all these texts; namely, the journey itself as more lastingly significant than the destination indicated, or at least implied, over its course.

The ‘song-cycle’ that is The Garden Path utilizes four poems by Amy Lowell and started out with piano accompaniment before being revised with string quartet. Here it is those parallels between her garden, which the poet describes in its myriad states and variety, and the human condition which come to the fore in these four relatively lengthy settings; alongside a feeling of what may lie beyond such luxuriance and abundance for the protagonist, as for the reader. That such ambiguity emerges so candidly yet obliquely is integral to this cycle’s fascination.

Finally to Other Earth and Skies – these ‘five miniatures’ after eighth-century Chinese poet Li Bai (once known as Li Tai-po) having been translated by Vikram Seeth, an author with whom Roth has collaborated on numerous occasions. It is the haiku-like brevity and concentration of the texts as sets the tone for this sequence, with its interplay between all-too-human emotions and metaphysical longing in which any vestige of ego has been subsumed into the numinous. Quite likely the deepest such cycle featured on this album, and certainly the most intriguing.

Does it all work?

Pretty much throughout. As an adherent of the ‘less is more’ ethos, Roth’s settings are almost consistently spare in texture and restrained in manner; their meaning arising out of the actual words as much as from any poetic gloss. Demonstrably yet never stereotypically tonal, while often teasing as to their emotional remit, this is song-writing of a high order and as pleasurable for the listeners as they are manifestly are for the singers and instrumentalists featured herein. All the texts are included, though there is never any problem with hearing what is being sung.

Is it recommended?

Indeed it is. The church acoustic is evidently an ideal ambience for recording such music, and those who respond to it should investigate earlier releases of Roth on this label – most notably the vocal miscellanies Songs in Time of War (SIGCD124) or Sometime I Sing (SIGCD332).

Listen / Buy

You can listen to excerpts and explore purchase options at the Signum Records website. Click on the names to read more about composer Alec Roth, and the performers Mark Padmore, Martha McLorinan, Hugo Hymas, Morgan Szymanski, Nicholas Daniel and the Sacconi Quartet

Published post no.2,893 – Wednesday 20 May 2026

On Record – Plural Ensemble / Fabian Panisello: Philip Cashian: Chamber Concertos, Dances & Nocturnes, The Distance of Night (IBS Classical)

Plural Ensemble / Fabian Panisello, Duncan Gifford (piano)

Philip Cashian
Chamber Concerto no.2 (2023)
Dances and Nocturnes (2020)
The Distance of Night (2022)
Chamber Concerto (1995)

IBS Classical IBS232025 [54’27”]
Producer Paco Moya Engineer Cheluis Salmerón

Recorded 9-10 November 2024 at 3-25 March 2021 at Auditorio Conservatorio Profesional de Getafe, Madrid

Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse

What’s the story?

The enterprising IBS Classical label issues a new album devoted to music by Philip Cashian (b.1963), perceptively realized by the Madrid-based Plural Ensemble with Fabian Panisello while affording a viable overview of this composer over almost three decades of creativity.

What’s the music like?

This programme is framed, albeit in reverse order, with Cashian’s chamber concertos written 28 years apart. What might now be designated the First Chamber Concerto remains one of its composer’s most significant works; a single movement whose 15 continuous sections unfold less as variations on ideas heard at the outset than as variants of each other in what becomes a constant and far-reaching metamorphosis. Resourcefully and often iridescently scored, it is a notable addition to a sub-genre which has accrued more than its share of innovative pieces.

Although it consists of four distinct (if more or less continuous) movements and is scored for similar forces (13 instead of 16 players), the Second Chamber Concerto underlines the sheer consistency of Cashian’s idiom over the intervening period. While each of these movements bears a descriptive title (derived from those of paintings in the first two instances), the music is no less sufficient on its own terms; arguably more so, given that symphonic density which emerges across its entirety while ensuring an ongoing momentum and a satisfying resolution.

In between, two smaller-scale though not necessarily slighter pieces testify to this composer’s versatility. Scored for piano quartet, Dances and Nocturnes pivots constantly between relative stasis and dynamism; its contrasted episodes making adept use of various sub-groupings, with not just the piano being given its due in several soloistic passages. Whether or not any ‘extra-musical’ aspect is at play, moreover, the ending is one of the most evocative, even ‘imagistic’ in Cashian’s output: a landscape of the mind which feels no less tangible through its being so.

Cashian’s various pieces for solo piano are mainly brief and/or with a didactic intention, but not The Distance of Night – an ‘in memoriam’ to Simon Bainbridge (colleague and erstwhile teacher) and one from 200 pieces commemorating the bicentenary of the Royal Academy of Music, where Cashian has been Head of Composition for almost two decades. What emerges is a slow barcarolle whose emotional intensification is achieved despite, or even because of, consistently restrained dynamics such as impart elusiveness and insubstantiality to the music.

Does it all work?

Indeed it does. Understated it might be, Cashian’s music is resourceful and engaging while never less than idiomatically written for the forces at hand. Music, then, which deserves the widest dissemination and summons a ready response from the Plural Ensemble with Fabian Panisello, a noted composer in his own right. The CD is as stylishly packaged as are all IBS releases, and the booklet features detailed notes about each work by Louise Drewett, but it seems a pity the PE’s individual members (not even pianist Duncan Gifford) could not have been listed.

Is it recommended?

Very much so, not least when the sound could hardly be bettered in terms of spaciousness or definition. Those who have previous albums devoted to Cashian (2000’s Dark Inventions and 2023’s The House of Night, both NMC) should waste no time in acquiring this latest release.

Listen / Buy

This album is released on Friday 5 June 2026, You can listen to excerpts and explore purchase options at the Presto Music website. Click on the names to read more about composer Philip Cashian, the Plural Ensemble, pianist Duncan Gifford and their conductor Fabian Panisello

Published post no.2,892 – Tuesday 19 May 2026