BBC Music Magazine

100 Years of British Song

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Bridge: Four Songs (1925);

R Clarke: June Twilight; The Seal Man; A Dream; Eight O’clock; Gurney: Down by the Salley Gardens; Snow; Lights Out; Sleep; Holst: A Vigil of Pentecost; The Ballad of Hunting Knowe; Twelve Humbert Wolfe Songs – selection James Gilchrist (tenor),

Nathan Williamson (piano)

SOMM SOMMCD0621 63:37 mins

This wonderful selection of early20th-century British songs, many concerning dreams and nightmares of the subconscio­us, opens with two Holst premieres.

A Vigil of Pentecost begins with the sweet seventh chords later used in ‘Venus’, but increases in emotional intensity as it describes the gathering heavenly host. The Ballad of Hunting Knowe is typical Holst in its acrid scherzando style. James Gilchrist, a fine lyric tenor with admirable sensitivit­y to text, gives committed performanc­es effectivel­y accompanie­d by

Nathan Williamson.

The five songs selected from Holst’s Humbert Wolfe settings are mostly on the light and whimsical side, the chilling ‘Betelgeuse’ alone representi­ng that collection’s darker reflection­s on mortality. A pity then that, despite Gilchrist’s sensitive accounts, Williamson’s playing seems over-literal, most especially in ‘The Dream City’ where he is outclassed by Britten’s poetic evocation with Peter Pears in their pioneering complete recording (released on Decca).

Williamson appears more at home with Rebecca Clarke – ‘The Seal Man’ is particular­ly beguiling, though Gilchrist gives the seducer’s blandishme­nts a sinister edge

– and Ivor Gurney, Williamson very effectivel­y handling the abrupt petering out of ‘Lights Out’. Their slow tempo for Bridge’s

1925 Four Songs accentuate­s their Scriabines­que qualities. Gilchrist’s tone is rather threadbare at the start of ‘Day after Day’, which might have benefited from another take. And I miss the human warmth in these songs as revealed by Sarah Leonard and Malcolm Martineau (on Cala), who also give a thrilling account of several of Holst’s Humbert Wolfe settings. Altogether, though, a very attractive recital. Daniel Jaffé PERFORMANC­E ++++

RECORDING ++++

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