
Matthew Schellhorn (piano)
Thurlow The Will of the Tones (2004)
Bussey Floreat Coll. Reg. (2021)
Burrell Pentecost (2017)
Homage to Haydn (2009) by Tim Watts, Colin Riley, Cecilia McDowall, Cheryl Frances-Hoad, Michael Zev Gordon and Jeremy Thurlow
Riley Joplin Jigsaws (2018)
Percy Chop and Change (2018)
Spicer Two Pieces for James (2010)
Briggs Willows and Jitterbug (2014)
First Hand Records FHR181 [83’03”]
Producer Simon Weir Engineer Ben Connellan
Recorded 2-4 December 2022 at Menuhin Hall, Stoke d’Abernon, Surrey
Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse
What’s the story?
First Hand Records issues this latest recital from Matthew Schellhorn, a collection of pieces by present-day composers with whom he has collaborated (often extensively) that amounts to an inclusive overview of his musical preoccupations and sympathies – odd or otherwise.
What’s the music like?
This album opens at the beginning with Schellhorn’s first-ever commission – a scintillating while demanding workout by Jeremy Thurlow that wrests musical cohesion out of pianistic fragmentation prior to its subtly conclusive coda. By contrast, Martin Bussey contributes a brace of pieces drawing repose from a tribute to author Philip Radcliffe and a lively coranto with that to conductor Philip Ledger. Diana Burrell’s work is the most substantial, utilizing the plainchant Veni Sancte Spiritus as cantus firmus for this three-movement sequence – the opening one a little too discursive in its unfolding, but the central panel distilling meditative calm then the finale building to a powerful apotheosis before subsiding into limpid serenity. Very different in every sense, those pieces – intended to be played in the order here – written to commemorate the bicentenary of Haydn’s death seem no less revealing of the personas of their respective writers; an anthology saying much about how this totemic figure is regarded by a representative sextet of British composers with notably different idioms and aesthetics.
One of these pieces being by Colin Riley duly leads into his own commission – six brief yet resourceful pieces taking their cue from four distinct rags by Scott Joplin: suffice to add that these latter can feel more oblique in their allusions than their anagrams. The work by Robert Percy started out very differently from that heard here – Schellhorn and its composer having refashioned it into a sequence of mobiles (eight out of a potential 10 included) fastidious of texture and elusive in content: there being evidently more than 40,000 possible permutations at least means it need never sound the same way twice. There could be nothing less arbitrary than birthday-tributes to the Reverend James Potts by Paul Spicer, a lively jaunt followed by a pensive pavane that underlines the love of both composer and recipient for the clavichord miniatures by Herbert Howells. Finally to Roger Briggs, American composer whose are the only pieces not commissioned by Schellhorn, but whose harmonic eloquence then rhythmic energy are gratefully seized on for what is a wholly apposite conclusion to this programme.
Does it all work?
Pretty much throughout. Listeners will inevitably prefer one or other composer to another, but there is no doubting the respect in which they hold Schellhorn, nor of the conviction which he brings to all this music. It helps that his instrument (not specified in the booklet) has been so faithfully captured, its tonal definition enhanced with the spacious surround-sound mix made possible by Dolby Atmos. All these pieces being first recordings, or at least first commercial recordings, means that a substantial amount of new piano repertoire is made available herein.
Is it recommended?
Indeed it is. Schellhorn contributes detailed and highly personable annotations, and one looks forward to more such anthologies from this source. No doubt he includes many of these pieces in his recitals, though there is no reason why other enterprising pianists should not follow suit.
Listen / Buy
You can explore purchase options at the First Hand Records website. Click on the name to read more about pianist Matthew Schellhorn
Published post no.2,896 – Sunday 24 May 2026