Composer: Joseph Holbrooke; Haydn Wood
- Holbrooke - Piano Concerto No. 1 "The Song of Gwyn ap Nudd", Op. 52
- Wood - Piano Concerto in D minor
Hamish Milne, piano
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Martyn Brabbins, conductor
Date: 2000
Label: Hyperion
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I confess to having been frustratingly underwhelmed, in the past, by what little I have heard of the Croydon-born composer and pianist Joseph Holbrooke (1878-1958). But the present ambitious First Piano Concerto (first performed by Harold Bauer under the composer's baton in November 1910) is by some margin the most impressive orchestral piece of his I've yet encountered. Dubbed a symphonic poem by its creator, it follows the narrative of a poem based on a Welsh legend by his patron Lord Howard de Walden (writing under the pseudonym of T E Ellis) entitled The Song of Gwyn ap Nudd (the full text of which is printed in the admirable booklet), yet, as annotator Lewis Foreman correctly observes, the work can also be appreciated perfectly well as a red-blooded romantic concerto, very much in the grand tradition.
On first acquaintance, I wondered whether Holbrooke's music had a strong enough thematic profile, but a second hearing soon uncovered plenty of ideas securely lodged in the memory bank (you somehow just know that the first movement's gorgeous second subject is destined to reappear in all its grandiloquent glory before the end). And there's no denying the deft resourcefulness and vaulting sweep with which Holbrooke handles proceedings. What's more, it receives an outstandingly eloquent, tirelessly committed treatment here - clearly the product of many hours of painstaking preparation.
Before he made his name in the field of light music, Haydn Wood (1882-1959) was a gifted violinist and composition pupil of Stanford at the Royal College of Music. Indeed, it was Stanford who conducted the Queen's Hall premiere of Wood's big-boned D minor Concerto in July 1909. It's an altogether more straightforward, less individual confection than it's partner. Greig's Concerto is the obvious template, and there are plentiful stylistic echoes throughout ot Tchaikovskys, Rachmaninov and MacDowell. The opening movement is full of effective display and boasts a ravishing secondary idea. Tuttis incline to overthickness (a recurring problem in both outer movements), yet there's some delightfully transparent scoring elsewhere (try from the start of the first-movement development section at 6'56''). The finale starts promisingly (th unison horns at the outset imediately call to mind the start of Tchaikovsky's First Concerto), but tends to lose its way. By far the best music comes in the central Andante - a genuinely haunting, deeply felt essay, boasting some wistfully fragrant orchestral sonorities. Not a great work, by any means, but incurable romantics will devour it. Again, the performance is securely in the luxury class, as are the Keener/Faulkner production-values.
An altogether exemplary release, then. Perhaps these same artists might now be persuaded to turn their attentions to Edgar Bainton's substantial Concerto-Fantasia of 1922 (a bewitching creation which Hamish Milne has already so eloquently championed on the BBC) ?
-- Andrew Achenbach, Gramophone
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Joseph Holbrooke (5 July 1878 – 5 August 1958) was an English composer, conductor, and pianist. He studied under Frederick Corder and Frederick Westlake at the Royal Academy of Music. Holbrooke was a late-Romantic composer, writing in a predominantly tonal and richly chromatic idiom. His style was essentially eclectic: whilst the early chamber works echo the language and methods of Brahms and Dvořák, there is also an exuberance informed by his affection for the music of Tchaikovsky. Only a small fraction of Holbrooke's large output has been recorded by CPO, Dutton, Naxos and Cameo Classics.
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Haydn Wood (25 March 1882 – 11 March 1959) was a 20th-century English composer and concert violinist. He studied violin with Enrique Fernández Arbós and composition with Charles Villiers Stanford at the Royal College of Music, then with César Thomson in Brussels. Alongside his 200 or so individual songs and seven song cycles, Haydn Wood was a prolific composer of orchestral music, including 15 suites, nine rhapsodies, eight overtures, three concertante pieces and nearly 50 other works scored for a variety of forces. The Isle of Man and its folk tunes were often the source of inspiration for Wood's music.
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Hamish Milne (27 April 1939 – 12 February 2020) was an English pianist known for his advocacy of Nikolai Medtner. He studied with Harold Craxton at the Royal Academy of Music and then in Italy with Guido Agosti. At the Accademia Chigiana in Siena he was lucky enough to hear the classes of Casals, Cortot, Segovia and, in particular, Sergiu Celibidache. Milne appeared as soloist with most of the leading British orchestras and gave over two hundred broadcasts for the BBC. He was also well known as a chamber musician. Milne recorded for Chandos, CRD, Danacord and Decca, as well as for Hyperion.
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