BBC Music Magazine

British Cello Works

- Helen Wallace

R Clarke: Rhapsody for Cello and Piano; Lutyens: Bagatelles; Maconchy: Divertimen­to for Cello and Piano; Smyth: Cello Sonata in C minor Lionel Handy (cello),

Jennifer Hughes (piano)

Lyrita SRCD.383 73:06 mins

This is a fascinatin­g quartet of cellopiano duos spanning a period of seismic shifts in music (1880 to 1943).

They happen to be all composed by women, all of whom had to battle to be heard, but whose highly distinctiv­e musical characters found expression in the aesthetic of their time.

Ethel Smyth’s richly lyric Sonata owes its opening motif to Schubert’s Arpeggione, but swiftly takes off in expansive and imaginativ­e flight. Her debt to Mendelssoh­n and Brahms is palpable, but this is highly intuitive writing for both instrument­s, showing all the promise realised in her Second Cello Sonata (1887). While the charming Allegretto and sincere Andante are perhaps over-extended, the outer movements are dynamic: it’s high time it was published. Lionel Handy and Jennifer

Hughes are warmly persuasive, if sometimes lacking in energy in performing this particular work.

This cannot be said for their inspired performanc­e of Rebecca Clarke’s Rhapsody (1923). It’s haunted by the modal material from the famous Viola Sonata, but conceived on a bigger, more dramatic scale. It’s also a gift to cellists, with its urgent, vaulting cantilenas against glassily transparen­t piano textures, and darkly mysterious recitative­s.

Elizabeth Machonchy’s Divertimen­to and Elisabeth Lutyens’s Bagatelles were written at almost the same time, during the war. Machonchy’s set are vividly etched miniatures, spiced with her typically angular wit and a huge range of colours: they don’t always take effortless flight off page in these performanc­es. Lutyens’s more austere sketches sometimes seem to turn too tightly in on themselves, obsessing over tonal starvation rations: neverthele­ss, the rigour and economy are impressive.

PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom