BBC Music Magazine

BAX • ELGAR

-

Bax: In Memoriam; Elgar: The Spirit of England; Une voix dans le désert; Grania and Diarmid

Rachel Nicholls, Jennifer France (soprano), Madeleine Shaw (mezzosopra­no), Joshua Ellicott (narrator);

Hallé Choir; Hallé/mark Elder

Hallé CDHLL7544 67:15 mins

Laurence Binyon’s texts of The Spirit of England have the kind of warmemoria­l sensibilit­y that divides opinion today. It was a sensibilit­y that appealed deeply to Elgar himself, as to millions of his compatriot­s; and it drew from him some vintage musical material, particular­ly in ‘To Women’, the second of the three sections.

The one deficiency in an otherwise memorable Hallé live performanc­e relates to the work’s only soloist: Rachel Nicholls’s soprano voice, for all its beautiful tone and line, sounds uncertain when expanding above mid-volume.

Also featured here are two genuine Elgar rarities. A Voice in the Wilderness, setting a translatio­n of the Belgian poet Emile Cammaerts, portrays a bleak wartime scene, where a passing soldier hears a peasant girl singing from within her family’s ruined cottage. Elgar’s beautifull­y imagined score is graced with two very fine performanc­es, from Joshua Ellicott’s narrator (his delivery and accent are pitched exactly right), and from soprano Jennifer France, whose touch with the girl’s song is an object-lesson in how to be affecting without affectatio­n. The three items of incidental music written in 1901 for Yeats’s play Grania and Diarmid, while outwardly slight, nonetheles­s conjure a sense of atmosphere that rivals Sibelius’s peerless mastery of the genre, with mezzo-soprano Madeleine Shaw excellent in the druidess’s song.

Bax’s orchestral In Memoriam

(An Irish Elegy), commemorat­ing those who died in the Easter Rising in Dublin in 1916, was the thoughtpro­voking counterwei­ght to The Spirit of England in the Hallé’s 2014 concert; it too is finely performed. Malcolm Hayes

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom