On Record – Ensemble Arcadiana – Eleanor Alberga: Works for Chamber Orchestra (Lyrita)

Ensemble Arcadiana / Thomas Kemp

Alberga
Dancing with the Shadow (1990, rev. 2021)
On a Bat’s Back I do Fly (2000)
Langvad (2006).

Lyrita SRCD446 [53’36”]
Producer/Engineer Stephen Frost

Recorded 11-12 October 2021 at Wyastone Concert Hall, Wyastone Leys, Monmouth

Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse

What’s the story?

Lyrita issues a further release of music by Eleanor Alberga, featuring three sizable works for chamber ensemble played by Ensemble Arcadiana and which between them amply underline this composer’s flexible while imaginative response when writing for this particular medium.

What’s the music like?

Now in her mid-70s, Alberga came from her native Jamaica to study in London and enjoyed early success as a concert pianist before joining London Contemporary Dance Theatre where she latterly became music director. This past quarter-century has seen her focus increasingly on composition – creating a substantial output as includes a symphony, two violin concertos (both released on Lyrita SRCD405), three string quartets plus a range of other works across the major genres – in an idiom which is contemporary without being obscure or inaccessible.

The earliest and largest of these three works, Dancing with the Shadow started out as music for dance and was commissioned by the ensemble Lontano, which also recorded two of the movements on the second volume of its series British Women Composers (Lorelt LNT103). Taking as its starting-point the Jungian concept of exploring the individual’s darker side or ‘shadow self’, these five movements variously combine the six musicians as part of a steady accumulation taking in the simmering anticipation of a Duo and lilting elegance of a Trio; then the animated interplay of a Quartet, enfolding eloquence of a Quintet (the emotional heart in all senses) and the heady excitement of a Sextet that affords a close as decisive as it is infectious – whether, or not, those competing halves of the psyche have been reconciled.

Each playing continuously, the remaining pieces are no less individual or engaging. Written for the Bournemouth mew-music ensemble Kokoro, On a Bat’s Back I Do Fly takes its cue from Ariel’s song in the final act of Shakespeare’s The Tempest and appealingly tackled by Thomas Arne, whose 1740s song-setting is alluded to over the course of music that proves as dextrous though ultimately as elusive as the text implies. Its title the Danish for ‘length’, Langvad is also a rural hamlet in Denmark as well as the setting for a summer festival run by the composer and her husband. Here the ongoing narrative (if, indeed, there is one) feels as elusive as the sound-world conjured from quintets of wind and strings – one, moreover, likely to prove as personal for each listener as it must no doubt be for the composer herself.

Does it all work?

Very much so. This is ensemble music that, informed and frequently permeated with dance rhythms, makes considerable demands on the technique of its exponents, who duly respond with conviction and audible enjoyment throughout. A pity, perhaps, that another of Alberga’s ensemble works could not have been included, though the programme as it stands can hardly be faulted as a representative overview. Neither does the dance component make these pieces other than self-sufficient in abstract terms and make for an engaging listen in their own right.

Is it recommended?

Indeed it is. The recording is as spacious yet immediate as expected from the acoustics of Wyastone Concert Hall, and there are informative annotations by Donald Sturrock. Those who acquired that previous Lyrita album should not hesitate to investigate this new release.

Listen / Buy

You can hear excerpts from the album and explore purchase options at the Presto Music website, and click on the names for more information on composer Eleanor Alberga, Ensemble Arcadiana and conductor Thomas Kemp

Published post no.2,803 – Thursday 19 February 2026

On Record – Berkeley Ensemble: Beauty Veil’d (EM Records)

Berkeley Ensemble [Sophie McQueen, Francesca Barritt (violins), Dan Shilladay (viola), Gemma Wareham (cello)] with Tom Wraith (cello, Dare), Simon Callaghan (piano – Dare, Howell Adagio and Caprice, Matthay)

Dare Phantasy Quintet (1933-4)
Howell Adagio and Caprice (1955); String Quartet in D minor (1933)
Matthay Piano Quartet in C major Op.20 (1882, rev.1905)
McEwan Nugae (1912)

EM Records EMRCD091 [58’13”]
Producer Matthew Bennett Engineer Dave Rowell

Recorded 28-30 August 2024 at St John the Evangelist, Oxford

Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse

What’s the story?

EM Records continues its in-depth exploration of neglected music with these first recordings by proceeding generations of British composers, superbly realized by the Berkeley Ensemble which has made it its mission to revive such works for the enjoyment of present-day listeners.

What’s the music like?

Remembered mainly for miniatures still featuring on Associated Board examinations, Marie Dare (1902-76) wrote several larger chamber works. The (not quite) symmetrical form of her Phantasy Quintet is adeptly handled, and if this piece does not quite maintain the expressive intensity of its initial section, the elaboration of its themes ensures a satisfying overall design. The presence of two cellos yields a burnished eloquence to the musical textures, and interest is sufficiently aroused to make a hearing of her String Quartet in G minor worth considering.

More striking are the two works by Dorothy Howell (1898-1982), the revival of whose music has centred on her orchestral output. Deftly scored for violin and piano, Adagio and Caprice moves between reticence and impulsiveness with a seamless cohesion. If the String Quartet is slightly less well integrated, it is also more questing harmonically with its opening section distilling a keen atmosphere that persists right through to a lively close. A pity Howell never wrote a full-length quartet, but the present pieces deserves their place on recital programmes.

His not uncontroversial reputation as piano pedagogue having overshadowed his legacy as a composer, Tobias Matthay (1958-1945) left a handful of chamber works of which the Piano Quartet prefigures the ‘phantasy’ concept in its single movement of interrelated sections that, between them, outline a formal design whose thematic elements are evolving right up to the resolute close. Worth hearing, but a complete recording of 31 Variations and Derivations on an Original Theme for piano is needed for a fuller reassessment of Matthay’s creative worth.

Ironic that Matthay’s Piano Quartet should have been dedicated to John Blackwood McEwan, whose subsequent condemnation of his teaching led to the former’s departure from the Royal Academy. Subtitled Seven Bagatelles and actually the fifth of his 17 string quartets, Nugae evokes various aspects of that Scottish landscape central to his thinking (notably the Solway Symphony) – its characterful alternation between brooding and animated vignettes making a cohesive sequence whose components would be equally worth hearing as separate encores.

Does it all work?

Pretty much always. There are no overlooked masterpieces here, though the works by Howell and McEwan certainly warrant regular hearings. That these are all premiere recordings makes this release a mandatory purchase for anyone interested in British music of the period and the Berkeley Ensemble, alongside Tom Wraith and Simon Callaghan, do them proud. The sound could hardly be improved on for clarity and definition, while Dan Shilladay’s annotations are informative and not unduly partisan in their making a case for the dissemination of this music.

Is it recommended?

It is indeed. Those who have the Chilingirian Quartet’s three volumes of McEwan’s quartets (Chandos) will welcome acquiring the present piece as a supplement, and one looks forward to further recordings of chamber works by Dare and Howell from these inquiring musicians.

Listen / Buy

You can hear excerpts from the album at the EM Records website, and explore purchase options at the Presto website. Click on the names to read more about the Berkeley Ensemble, Simon Callaghan and Tim Wraith, and composers Marie Dare, Dorothy Howell, Tobias Matthay and John Blackwood McEwan

Published post no.2,801 – Tuesday 17 February 2026

In Appreciation: Helmuth Rilling

by Ben Hogwood picture courtesy of Opus Artists

Last week we learned the sad news of the death of conductor Helmuth Rilling, at the age of 92. An obituary can be found at the New York Times website

Rilling will forever be closely associated with the music of Johann Sebastian Bach, becoming the first conductor to record all of his cantatas in a project begun in October 1969 and completed on the occasion of Bach’s 300th anniversary in 1985. The results were released on the German label Hänssler, and immediately won the ‘Grand Prix du Disque’.

In honour of Rilling’s achievements, this Tidal playlist comprises his recordings of three Bach cantatas written for the Sunday before Lent – falling today – and excerpts from works he commissioned for Passion 2000, marking the 250th anniversary of Bach’s death, from the composers Tan Dun, Osvaldo Golijov, Wolfgang Rihm and Sofia Gubaidulina

Published post no.2,799 – Sunday 15 February 2026

In Appreciation: Tamás Vásáry

by Ben Hogwood picture courtesy of United Archives

Last week we learned the sad news of the death of Hungarian pianist and conductor Tamás Vásáry, at the age of 92.

More details about Vásáry’s accomplishments can be found in an obituary at Classical Music Daily

Vásáry made many fine recordings as a pianist, with his exploits in Chopin, Liszt and Rachmaninov especially noteworthy, while as a conductor he enjoyed nearly a decade with the Bournemouth Sinfonietta, yielding imaginative albums looking at the music of Respighi, Honegger and Martinu.

Music from these recordings can be heard on a Tidal playlist which you can access here:

Published post no.2,795 – Wednesday 11 February 2026

On Record – BBC Philharmonic Orchestra / Rumon Gamba: Overtures from the British Isles Vol. 3 (Chandos)

BBC Philharmonic Orchestra / Rumon Gamba

Arnell The New Age, Op. 2 (1939)
Brian The Tinker’s Wedding (1948)
Bridge Rebus H191 (1940)
Britten orch. Colin Matthews Overture to ‘Paul Bunyan’ Op.17 (1941)
A. Bush Resolution Op.25 (1944)
G. Bush Yoric (1949)
Fenby Rossini on Ilkla Moor (1938)
Jones Comedy Overture (1942)
Orr The Prospect of Whitby (1948)
Parker Overture to ‘The Glass Slipper’ (1944)
Rawsthorne Street Corner (1944)

Chandos CHAN20351 [77’20’’]
Producer Jonathan Cooper Engineer Stephen Rinker, Philip Halliwell

Recorded 23 May (Arnell, Brian, Britten, G. Bush, Rawsthorne), 20 November (Parker), 21 November 2024 (Bridge, A. Bush, Fenby, Jones, Orr) at MediaCityUK, Salford, Manchester

Reviewed by Richard Whitehouse

What’s the story?

Chandos continues its series devoted to British Overtures with the third instalment featuring three first recordings among those eleven works which, between them, demonstrate just how significant to British concertgoing was this now neglected genre throughout the inter-war era.

What’s the music like?

The album gets off to a cracking start with The Tinker’s WeddingHavergal Brian’s overview of a play by J. M. Synge, by turns uproarious and ruminative, that duly launched his abundant Indian Summer. After this, Geoffrey Bush’s Yorick cannot help sounding well-behaved if with sufficient expressive contrast for an evocative portrayal of Shakespeare’s hapless jester. In his detailed booklet note, Lewis Foreman describes Alan Rawsthorne’s Street Corner as ‘‘largely forgotten’’, which is a pity given its vivid conjuring of time and place has dated as well as the best Ealing Comedy. If Daniel Jones’ take on its subject may be less memorable, his Comedy Overture exudes more than enough humour and intrigue to make its acquaintance worthwhile.

Frank Bridge’s last completed work, Rebus was unheard for decades after its premiere but this third recording confirms it as a minor masterpiece and the finest of all these pieces – not least as an object-lesson in being accessible without diluting individuality. Robin Orr first attracted attention with The Prospect of Whitby, and his bracingly resourceful evocation of the London pub should not have waited so long for its recording. Richard Arnell was clearly out to make a statement of intent with The New Age, which generates real energy between imposing outer sections. Benjamin Britten might not have intended to preface his operetta Paul Bunyan with an overture but, as realized by Colin Matthews, it leaves a pleasing if anonymous impression.

Far more personality is conveyed by Alan Bush in Resolution, derived from an earlier piece for brass band and which continues that dialectical facet evident in much of his earlier music through its contrapuntal dexterity. There could be no greater contrast than The Glass Slipper, Clifton Parker’s overture to Herbert and Eleanor Farjeon’s ‘fairy tale with music’ that found success as a Christmas Matinee in London’s West End. Most appealing for its slightness and knowingly fey charm, it ideally complements Rossini on Ilkla MoorEric Fenby’s ingenious homage to the Italian master which came about through (deliberate?) misunderstanding only to enjoyed frequent performance, and which entertainingly rounds off the present collection.

Does it all work?

Yes, whether in terms of the overtures heard individually and a continuous overall sequence. Those who have acquired those previous volumes (or Chandos’s two issues of British Tone Poems) will recall that Rumon Gamba favours predominantly swift tempos and so it proves here, though there is never a sense of this music unnecessarily being rushed, while the BBC Philharmonic is more than equal to the often considerable technical demands of each piece. None of those overtures previously recorded can surely have emerged so effectively as here

Is it recommended?

Indeed it is. The continued absence of overtures from the programmes of most UK orchestras means such pieces have little chance of reaching a new public other than with recordings, and there could be no greater incentive to get to know them than through a collection such as this.

Listen / Buy

You can hear excerpts from the album and explore purchase options at the Chandos website, or you can listen to the album on Tidal. Click to read more about the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra and conductor Rumon Gamba

Published post no.2,794 – Tuesday 10 February 2026