On Record – Pullman: III (Western Vinyl)

Reviewed by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

This is the keenly awaited follow-up to Pullman’s second album Viewfinder, released a whole quarter of a century ago.

In that time a lot has changed for the quintet supergroup, not least the diagnosis of drummer Tim Barnes with early onset Alzheimer’s disease. It was this that inspired his colleagues – Ken ‘Bundy K.’ Brown (Tortoise / Directions in Music), Curtis Harvey (Rex), Chris Brokaw (Come), and Doug McCombs (Tortoise / Eleventh Dream Day);– to get on with finishing and recording III, a task with which they were occupied from 2016 to 2023.

What’s the music like?

The press release gets it right, describing the ability of III to “carry forward the group’s signature intimacy and space while embodying the spirit of community that has always defined their work”. These different elements bring a natural push-pull throughout the album.

This is the shortest of the band’s three albums, and the quietest too – but if experienced in the right environment, III is still able to cast a spell.

An early blast of sound and distortion from Bray sets up Weightless, a shimmering tale of woozy guitars, subtle drumming and a musical structure like a densely packed hedge, through which can be glimpsed an active bass line, thoughtfully realised percussion and guitars blowing in the musical breeze.

Thirteen is in the wide open air, building up a head of steam with guitars and percussion on full, but then unexpectedly cutting to nothing more than a flickering candle, sustained by treble guitars and keyboard, which gradually subsides to silence.

October, meanwhile, is an enchanting study in long form, gradually spinning longer, arching melodic figures, before Kabul steps forward with a confidently picked guitar figure and a stronger rhythmic profile, momentum gathering through to the end.

Does it all work?

It does, and III is a rewarding listen, but its relatively short duration means the spell isn’t entirely cast.

Is it recommended?

In spite of the above, yes. III is often a sonic treat, its studies in sound and colour creating pictures that are consistently engaging.

Listen / Buy

Published post no.2,787 – Tuesday 3 February 2026

In Concert – Zoë Beyers, English Symphony Orchestra / Kenneth Woods: Vaughan Williams, Sawyers & Elgar @ Cheltenham Town Hall

Zoë Beyers (violin, above), English Symphony Orchestra / Kenneth Woods

Vaughan Williams The Wasps (1909) – Overture
Sawyers Symphony no.6 ‘A Pastoral’ (2022) [World Premiere]
Elgar Violin Concerto in B minor Op.61 (1909-10)

Town Hall, Cheltenham
Wednesday 21 January 2026

Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse Photo of Zoë Beyers (c) Bill Leighton

This afternoon’s concert in the second season of its Cheltenham residency found the English Symphony Orchestra tackling, appropriately enough, an all-English programme; the Overture from Vaughan Williams’s incidental music to The Wasps being an ideal curtain-raiser with its interplay of incisiveness and eloquence ideally judged. The performance was enhanced by an unerring balance that allowed such as Rita Schindler’s dextrous harp playing to register with real clarity. Hopefully the whole suite will appear at an ESO concert sometime in the future.

The music of Philip Sawyers has appeared frequently on ESO programmes this past decade, with his Third Symphony launching the orchestra’s 21st Century Symphony Project back in 2016. A decade on bought the premiere of his Sixth Symphony – less epic in scope than the Third or Fourth in this cycle and without the searching ambiguities of the Fifth, but a piece whose modest length (30 minutes) or forces (double woodwind, horns and trumpets) likely belie the emotional range of what is being played out across these four compact movements.

Its subtitle evidently an afterthought, ‘A Pastoral’ deftly characterizes this symphony audibly influenced by if never beholden to that by Beethoven. Hence the opening Moderato implies a journey whose destination seems at best uncertain, its accumulating tension carried over into an Andante where scenic aspect is countered with more subjective preoccupations. Nor is the Allegro of an unchecked jollity, the insistent rhythmic profile accumulating an impetus such as takes on more elemental qualities in its visceral latter stages. The final Allegretto surveys all that went before (whether motivically or emotionally) through a process of clarifying and honing earlier ideas towards an ending which, with its evocation of birdsong, affords closure but not catharsis. An ambivalence Sawyers will hopefully address in his Seventh Symphony.

Assuredly directed by Kenneth Woods (below), this first performance was almost all that could have been wished as to accuracy of ensemble or interpretive insight. Good to hear it was recorded for future release, and hopefully Sawyers’s Sixth will receive more hearings before too long.

After the interval, Zoë Beyers repeated what was a well-received account of Elgar’s Violin Concerto from last year’s Elgar Festival. With its opulent scale and solo part that had been conceived for Fritz Kreisler, this could never be other than a testing proposition but Beyers succeeded admirably in conveying that formal intricacy and expressive force which typify this work. The opening Allegro was rarely other than cohesive, thanks not least to Woods’s astute accompanying, and the Andante radiated an emotional warmth with no risk of undue emoting. Beyers had the measure of the lengthy finale, duly coming into her own with that accompanied cadenza such as reviews previous themes at an emotional remove and whose ambivalence resonated long after activity had been resumed on the way to a decisive close. An engrossing performance which concluded this concert in impressive fashion. Woods and the ESO return to Cheltenham Town Hall next month with a new piece by David Matthews, alongside Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertante (for strings) and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony.

To read more about the orchestra’s 2025/26 season, visit the English Symphony Orchestra website. Click on the names for more on violinist Zoë Beyers, conductor Kenneth Woods and composer Philip Sawyers

Published post no.2,786 – Monday 2 February 2026

In appreciation – Matthias Siefert

Today I want to use Arcana to pay tribute to a great friend, who very sadly passed away recently at the age of 63.

I first met Matthias Siefert in the year 2000. We were working at an Internet startup company, Muze UK, whose function was to supply data on music and film to the likes of Amazon and BOL. Matthias was brought in to head up the German department – and later, after the company was absorbed into what was then RED, we ended up working together at PPL for a while.

We formed a firm friendship based on humour (or lack of!), sport and music. Matthias was incredibly well connected and our musical tastes frequently coincided, him approaching from a punk direction and me as a late pop music developer in the 1990s.

Matthias’s connections came through his own love of music and his career as a manager, looking after a host of up-and-coming bands while forming connections to the well-known ones. I have put together some videos of songs we heard at Matthias’s funeral on Friday, along with choice cuts from musical people he knew and who we interacted with. The first is from a gig we went to in 2003, to celebrate the impending release of a new album from Goldfrapp, some of whom he knew well. This was when they were about to go stellar:

Matthias’s funeral began with music from The Coral Sea, the California band he managed headed by Rey Villalobos:

A particularly beautiful moment in the ceremony combined a meaningful montage of photographs and this beautiful early Elton John song, previously unknown to me:

Matthias was good friends with Roland Orzabal and Curt Smith from Tears For Fears – and it was wholly apt that the shuffle function brought this song up to head the playlist in the pub where we had gathered to celebrate his life:

Another connection that Matthias had was with the duo Yello, with both Boris Blank and Dieter Meier. The obvious choice here is one of their stand-out tracks:

One of the many new bands Matthias introduced me to in the noughties was The Infadels, and to this day I am surprised they didn’t make it big, because the songs are brilliant! We went to an old-school, sweaty gig at the Water Rats, King’s Cross, where they dazzled with their special mix of electronic and pop. This song was a particular highlight for me!

There is only one place to finish, however…and it’s with the final song from the funeral ceremony, The Black KeysLittle Black Submarine. Again this is a song I was not familiar with, but it struck deep with its deceptively pastoral opening and its uncanny resemblance to Led Zeppelin. Listen to the full song, though – especially if you don’t know it, and revel in the moment where the drums kick in!

Rest well, Matthias. We’ll miss you greatly, and our condolences go to your special family and friends in their shock and sadness. I will miss our chats about music and football, more recently from afar, but thanks so much for the music and the memories!

Ben Hogwood

Published post no.2,785 – Sunday 1 February 2026

On Record – Cast: Yeah Yeah Yeah (Scruff Of The Neck)

Reviewed by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

Cast are celebrating 30 years as a band by building up an impressive momentum. Fresh from the high of supporting Oasis on their UK tour, the Liverpool band follow up Love Is The Call from 2024 by renewing their acquaintance with Youth, who produced that album.

What’s the music like?

Affirmative, upbeat and positive! There is a swagger to John Power and his band that really suits them, and Youth has added a low-slung funk that they rarely had even in their mid-1990s heyday. Now they have gone with both barrels on production, adding spiritual undertones to the early Primal Scream groove of 2, then packing in the harmonies and distortion on single Poison Vine, where P. P. Arnold adds a thrilling top line and Jay Lewis a fulsome bass.

John Power’s vocals are also a strong feature, lending songs like Free Love an extra dash of feeling. Say Something New is typical cast – straight to the point, but with the added bonus of one of the many catchy melodies this album holds. At the other end, Way It’s Gotta Be is entirely bass-driven, reeking of Second Coming-era Stone Roses – in a good way. As if that isn’t enough, Weight Of The World has an excellent chorus and Birds Heading South is a warm-hearted closing track.

Does it all work?

It does. Yeah Yeah Yeah is no-frills and all the better for it!

Is it recommended?

If you like Cast, then this is a no-brainer, and if you’re approaching from the direction of early 1990s Manchester, then it’s also a recommended stopping point. John Power sounds more confident than ever, and the ten songs here are guaranteed to raise the mood, as Cast continue to strengthen their hand.

Listen / Buy

Published post no.2,784 – Saturday 31 January 2026

On Record – BBC Philharmonic Orchestra / Michael Seal – Bliss: Miracle in the Gorbals, Metamorphic Variations (Chandos)

BBC Philharmonic Orchestra / Michael Seal

Bliss
Miracle in the Gorbals, F6 (1944)
Metamorphic Variations, F122 (1972)

Chandos CHSA5370 [79’57”]
Producer Brian Pidgeon Engineers Stephen Rinker, Owain Williams (Miracle in the Gorbals), Amy Brennan (Metamorphic Variations)

Recorded 27 February 2025 (Metamorphic Variations), 1 March 2025 (Miracle in the Gorbals), MediaCity UK, Salford, Manchester

Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse

What’s the story?

Chandos issues the most important release of music by Arthur Bliss for the 50th anniversary of his death – coupling the second of his four ballets, in its new critical edition, with the last as well as the most ambitious of his orchestral works in what is its first complete recording

What’s the music like?

With its striking choreography from Robert Helpmann (after the story by Robert Benthall), Miracle in the Gorbals was initially even more successful than its predecessor Checkmate – being revived annually between 1944 and 1950. Other than a 1958 revival, however, there was no more stagings until that by Birmingham Royal Ballet in 2014; not least because the magic realism that transcends an otherwise grimly realistic scenario and struck a resonance in wartime Britain became passé soon afterward. Yet the quality of a score as finds Bliss at his most populist but also most uncompromising cannot be denied, and this new recording conveys these extremes in full measure. Hearing sections III (The Girl Suicide), X (Dance of Deliverance) and XV (The Killing of the Stranger) ought to banish any lingering doubts.

Premiered at Croydon’s Fairfield Halls during April 1973, Metamorphic Variations is Bliss’s lengthiest orchestral work. Shorter than intended, even so, with two sections being omitted at its first hearing and subsequently. This recording sees their belated and rightful reinstatement.

The three primary ideas are outlined in Elements: an oboe cantilena, a phrase for horns then strings, and a cluster from woodwind – melodic, rhythmic and harmonic possibilities that are explored intensively in what follows. The additional sections are an atmospheric Contrasts, whose absence has been to the detriment of overall balance, then a Children’s March which pivots from innocence to experience. Highlights include an increasingly animated Polonaise and Funeral Processions with its anguished culmination. Towards the close, a proclamatory Dedication duly underlines the inscription to artist George Dannatt and his wife Ann, then Affirmation draws those initial elements into a sustained peroration that pointedly subsides into a return of the oboe cantilena which, in turn, brings the closing withdrawal into silence.

Do the performances work?

Although the concert suite from Miracle in the Gorbals has received persuasive accounts by the composer (EMI/Warner) and Paavo Berglund (Warner), the complete ballet has only been recorded by Christopher Lyndon-Gee with the Queensland Symphony (Naxos) – compared to which this latest version, aside from its using the critical edition by Ben Earle, is superior in playing and recording. Here, as in Metamorphic Variations, the BBC Philharmonic responds assuredly to Michael Seal whose interpretative stance is distinctively his own. This latter has been recorded by Barry Wordsworth (Nimbus) and David Lloyd-Jones (Naxos), along with a broadcast from Vernon Handley (BBC Radio Classics), but the newcomer’s conviction gives it an advantage apart from those variations whose reinstatement enhances the work’s stature.

Is it recommended?

Very much so, not least given the spaciousness and realism of its SACD sound, together with informative notes from Ben Earle and Andrew Burn. Is it too much to hope Chandos will yet tackle either of Bliss’s operas which, along with The Golden Cantata, are his only significant works still to be commercially recorded? Michael Seal would be the ideal candidate to do so.

Listen / Buy

You can hear excerpts from the album and explore purchase options at the Chandos website, or you can listen to the symphonies on Tidal. Click on the names to read more about the Arthur Bliss Society, conductor Michael Seal and the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra

Published post no.2,783 – Friday 30 January 2026