In concert – Raphael Wallfisch, BBC Concert Orchestra / Martin Yates: English Music Festival opening concert – A Night of Bliss

Raphael Wallfisch (cello), BBC Concert Orchestra / Martin Yates

Alwyn The Innumerable Dance – An English Overture (1933)
Delius ed. Beecham A Village Romeo and Juliet – The Walk to the Paradise Garden (1907)
Bliss Cello Concerto F107 (1969-70)
Vaughan Williams Heroic Elegy and Triumphal Epilogue (1901 rev. 1902)
Bate Symphony no.2, Op.20 (1937-39) [World Premiere]

Dorchester Abbey, Dorchester-on- Thames
Friday 24 May 2025

Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse Photos (c) John Francis

The Walk to the Paradise Garden’s filling the expanse of Dorchester Abbey can only mean the English Music festival was again underway, Martin Yates drawing a response from the BBC Concert Orchestra that exquisitely conveyed the acute pathos of Delius’s operatic interlude.

This opening concert had begun with another reclamation from William Alwyn’s early output. Offshoot of his early fascination with William Blake, The Innumerable Dance is more a tone poem than overture – ‘English’ or otherwise. Its initial phase crescendos in a potent evocation of sunrise, and if the livelier music that follows sounds comparatively anodyne, its finesse of instrumentation (with harp and celesta much in evidence) and its formal deftness made for a welcome revival. How about including Alwyn’s Second or Fifth Symphonies at a future EMF?

Arthur Bliss has enjoyed a veritable upsurge of performances in this 50th anniversary of his death, with his Cello Concerto among the finest works from that creative Indian Summer of his last decade. Compared with those for piano and violin before it, it eschews Romantic-era trappings in favour of Classical lucidity and proportion; its initial Allegro as much impulsive as decisive in its unfolding, with a semi-accompanied cadenza for its development in which Raphael Wallfisch (above) dovetailed effortlessly with orchestra. Subdued and poignant, the central Larghetto doubtless draws on the distant past in its heartfelt rumination, and while the final Allegro seems to dispel such memories, its progress is shot through with an ambivalence as makes the closing exchanges less than conclusive. Not least in this persuasive performance.

After the interval, another worthwhile revival in Heroic Elegy and Triumphal Epilogue with which Vaughan Williams, then in his late twenties, sought eminence among his peers. Only the first part, its fatalistic tread underpinning an eloquent theme on horns, was played at the time – the composer likely unsure if those episodic build-ups and rhetorical overkill of what follows were justified. Thanks to Yates’s assured direction, this music sustained itself up to a fervent apotheosis presaging the first movement from Sinfonia Antarctica half a century on.

Yates has always sought to include a world premiere in his EMF concerts and tonight saw that of Stanley Bate’s Second Symphony. A composer who rather snatched defeat from the jaws of victory, he doubtless had high hopes for a piece written in Paris and London but not accepted (if indeed it was ever put forward) for performance. Shostakovich’s Fifth has been suggested as precursor but a more likely precedent is VW’s Fourth, not least with the fractious progress of an Allegro whose starkly contrasted themes build towards a combative development then resigned coda. Sombre and fatalistic with a powerfully wrought culmination, the Andante is its highlight and the ensuing Scherzo puts the rhythmic syncopation of that in Walton’s First to very different if hardly less effective ends (which have been even more so placed second).

If it fails to clinch the whole, the finale’s alternately baleful expression and propulsive motion secures a rousing peroration then a coda which, if its serenity is borne out of exhaustion rather than affirmation, fittingly ends a work whose motto might well be that of ‘travelling in hope’.

Published post no.2,544 – Sunday 25 May 2025

Summer Music in City Churches 2025 – Eternal Light

from the press release and website:

Summer Music in City Churches is a festival in the City of London. Founded in 2018, it presents beautiful music to engage, divert and inspire, in ancient and architecturally stunning churches in the Square Mile. Standing cheek by jowl with City offices, these churches are glorious settings in which to listen and reflect: oases of history, beauty and peace amidst the 24-7 hurly-burly of City life.

It’s only a month until the opening night of this year’s Summer Music in City Churches. If you haven’t got your tickets yet, don’t lose any time.

‘Eternal Light’ is a series of stunning concerts presented during evenings and lunchtimes from 18th to 27th June. Along with some of the great choral requiem settings (Fauré, Duruflé, Verdi), you’ll find an enticing variety of luminous music performed in beautiful, historic churches.

It is our pleasure to welcome back the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted this year for the first time by Sir John Rutter. Other returning festival favourites include string quartet Brother Tree Sound, Tier3 Trio, RPO Brass, and pianists Iain Farrington, Mark Bebbington and Viv McLean.

We are thrilled to feature a number of up-and-coming talented young musicians, including: duo Eleanor Grant (voice and double bass) & Gus McQuade (guitar); soprano soloist Hannah Dienes-Williams; organist Paul Greally; award-winning guitarist Jack Hancher; and the exquisite sound of Corvus Consort.

There’s a special chance to hear Lucy Parham‘s composer portrait of Debussy, ahead of a sell-out performance at the Wigmore Hall later in the year.

Finally, don’t miss Verdi’s immortal Requiem in the remarkable new version by Richard Blackford performed by the City of London Choir under Daniel Hyde.

Evening concerts take place in St Giles Cripplegate; at lunchtimes we visit light-filled St James Garlickhythe, St Mary Abchurch and St Botolph-without-Bishopsgate for the first time. Click below for full details and to book tickets.

As a subscriber to our newsletter, you can buy tickets to all concerts – lunchtime and evening – with 20% off by quoting KESEL20 when you book. Or buy a season ticket to the whole festival for just £100.

For details and booking, head to the Summer Music in City Churches website

Published post no.2,543 – Saturday 24 May 2025

Let’s Dance – Alexander Flood: Artifactual Rhythm (Atjazz Record Company)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

Following the singles Life Is A Rhythm and Can’t Get Enough, Alexander Flood delivers a new album to build on their promise. The idea behind Artifactual Rhythm is that it should “present a re-interpretation of club and DJ music through the lens of a live band with a jazz edge”, bringing a more human element to proceedings.

It was recorded live in Naarm / Melbourne, with a band including Erica Tucceri (flute), Finn Rees (keyboards) and Dylan Paul (bass), as well as guest vocals from Cazeaux O.S.L.O, Kara Manasala and New York’s Vivian Sessoms.

What’s the music like?

Summery! This is a set of consistently good songs, on a really winsome, summery house vibe with piano high in the mix. Flood definitely knows what works, and hits the spot on many occasions – with a good bounce to the beat and a plethora of sunshine vocals.

The breezy improvisations are led by flute and dreamy keyboard, with the live feel paying dividends on the likes of Artifact, where a bit of jazz (but not too much!) lifts the spirits beautifully.

Life Is A Rhythm is a classy deeper number, with a strong guest spot from Cazeaux O.S.L.O. Vivian Sessoms is terrific on Can’t Get Enough, but topping the lot is Vibraçâo, a samba fest strewn with broken beats and packed with feelgood vibes.

Does it all work?

It does – no pretence, this is an album that delivers on its promises!

Is it recommended?

Most definitely – an album for holiday season that should be high on the packing list!

For fans of… Masters At Work, Joey Negro, Shapeshifters, Incognito

Listen / Buy

Published post no.2,542 – Friday 23 May 2025

In concert – Roberts Balanas, Ealing Symphony Orchestra / John Gibbons: Electrifying Ealing – Bernstein, Ángela Luq, Coleridge-Taylor & Bliss

Roberts Balanas (electric violin, below), Ealing Symphony Orchestra / John Gibbons (above)

Bernstein orch. Kostall & Ramin Symphonic Dances from West Side Story (1957 arr. 1961)
Luq Electric Violin Concerto ‘Machina Humana’ (2023-24) [World Premiere]
Coleridge-Taylor Valse de la reine Op.22/3 (1899)
Bliss A Colour Symphony Op.24 (1921-22, rev, 1930)

St Barnabas Church, Ealing, London
Saturday 10 May 2025

Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse Picture of Roberts Balanas (c) Kiril Kozlov

Another typically enterprising concert by the Ealing Symphony Orchestra and its longstanding music director John Gibbons, featuring the first performance (albeit not designated such) of a major work for electric violin and pieces from a diverse trio of British or American composers.

It might have been orchestrated by regular collaborators Irwin Kostall and Sid Ramin, but the Symphonic Dances from Leonard Bernstein’s West Side Story is as characteristic of the latter’s idiom as it is representative of his most successful musical. Rhythmically a little straightlaced in the Prologue, the performance audibly hit its stride with a Somewhere of melting pathos then a vivacious Scherzo leading to an impulsive Mambo, before the insouciant Cha Cha and ominous fugal Cool presaged a visceral Rumble then a Finale of heartfelt eloquence.

Lauded for her work with electronics, Spanish composer Ángela Luq evidently had no qualms when tackling a full-scale concerto for electric violin. Comprising four contrasted movements, Machina humana duly exploits those timbral and expressive possibilities of its solo instrument – whether in the intricate rhythmic dialogues of its opening Machina, the lucid textures and sensuous harmonies of Sueño (Dream), the impulsive conflict between soloist and orchestra of Animal, then the surging emotions of the final Amar (Love). Musical content may have lacked memorability, with the work rather falling short of its ambition (at least as expressed in the composer’s programme note), but the virtuosity or finesse of Roberts Balanas in realizing this innovative project was unarguable, with the Ealing SO audibly relishing its involvement.

No doubt this piece will secure even greater attention when soloist, orchestra and conductor tour it to Latvia in due course. Maybe on that occasion Gibbons will take the opportunity to give what would likely a first hearing there of Valse de la reine by Samuel Coleridge-Taylor. Third in a sequence of Four Characteristic Waltzes, this is a reminder that its composer was highly adept at ‘light’ music; its halting gait and its affecting lyricism to the fore in what was a welcome revival and a pertinent reminder of his legacy at the time of his premature death.

It also made a telling entrée into A Colour Symphony by Arthur Bliss. This 50th anniversary-year of his passing has led to a notable upsurge in performance and not least of what remains his best-known orchestral work. Whether or not Gibbons has previously conducted it, he had the measure of this piece. Purple made for a thoughtful yet never turgid prelude; one whose stately processional found immediate contrast in the alternate impetus and effulgence of the scherzo that is Red. Nor was there any underplaying of that ambivalent and even ominous element which underpins the outwardly placed unfolding of Blue, a slow movement which leads effortlessly into the finale that is Green with its intricately arrayed double-fugue that builds to a peroration whose outcome is a true declaration of intent thrillingly conveyed here.

An impressive performance, then, which once again confirmed Gibbons’s prowess across the broad spectrum of British orchestral music. Hopefully the Ealing SO will be able to include more Bliss in future programmes, this being music it had clearly taken to its collective heart.

Published post no.2,541 – Thursday 22 May 2025

Switched On – Loscil: Lake Fire (Kranky)

by Ben Hogwood

What’s the story?

Loscil’s music has always spoken vividly of its surroundings, bringing the wide-open panoramas of Vancouver and British Columbia to vivid life on even the smallest sound system. Here, Scott Morgan’s alias brings sonic despatches from the front line with a striking account and observation of the recent wildfires in the region.

What’s the music like?

As dark and thick as the clouds of smoke that were hanging over British Columbia when this album was made. Ash Clouds is the most explicit expression of the darkness that developed, with a deep chord that barely moves, hanging over the ground.

That isn’t to say that Lake Fire is depressing, mind, as there are shards of bright colour that draw the attention in spite of the thick, uneasy ambience behind. This is evident in the closing of Spark, where dark chords, low in the spectrum, are at odds with brighter chimes at the top, suggesting light peeking through the clouds.

There are some incredibly deep textures on Arrhythmia. Bell Flame flickers, with sonorities similar to a pipe organ in the treble but again with thick, almost oppressive drones beneath. Candling has an improvisatory feel, melodies rising out of the mists like peaks of a flame before subsiding again. Most moving of all is the closing title track, barely audible at first as it steals in on a breath of wind but soon growing in power, the dense cloud sweeping all before it – before retreating and fizzling out as soon as it began.

Does it all work?

It does – and in the process offers an affecting counterpart to the clarity of albums like Sea Island.

Is it recommended?

It is. If you take in the album with its accompanying images and video content, Lake Fire is an intensely moving experience, a tale of man-made and enabled destruction that is truly heart-rending. And yet within the depths of this music there is still some elemental hope, and that shines through in Loscil’s remarkable music.

For fans of… Tim Hecker, Stars of the Lid, Machinefabriek, Fennesz

Listen / Buy

Published post no.2,540 – Wednesday 21 May 2025