BBC Music Magazine

Arnold • Gipps • Schönberge­r

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Malcolm Arnold: Horn Concerto No. 2; Ruth Gipps: Horn Concerto; Christoph Schönberge­r: Horn Concerto

Ben Goldscheid­er (horn); Philharmon­ia Orchestra/

Lee Reynolds

Willowhayn­e WHR068 62:18 mins

As an 18-year-old, Ben Goldscheid­er displayed considerab­le stamina when he reached the finals of the 2016 BBC Young Musician of the Year competitio­n while in the midst of revising for his exams. It was good training for the career of a horn player, daily faced with an instrument that without skill and determinat­ion can easily prove treacherou­s. You know you’re in safe hands from Goldscheid­er’s assertive first notes in Malcolm Arnold’s Concerto

No. 2, and his richly varied tones, from mellifluou­s to the almost rude, prove a joy on this wellrecord­ed album.

Some of the music is a joy, too, with Arnold’s compact creation from 1956 – by turns thrusting, singing and mysterious­ly eerie – only dropping in quality in the slightly rudimentar­y finale. Though equally mercurial, Ruth Gipps’s concerto (1968) is also wellknitte­d. Blessed with inventive orchestral textures, it allows the Philharmon­ia and conductor Lee Reynolds plenty of chances to strut their stuff, though the recording balance sensibly places the soloist, often burbling away like a coffee percolator, always an inch ahead.

Both works prove excellent examples of post-war composers in Britain who, in Goldscheid­er’s words, worked ‘against the grain of musical fashion’ and refused to kiss tonality goodbye. Alas, the tonal concerto written for Goldscheid­er by the German-born and Uk-based Christoph Schönberge­r isn’t in the same class. Almost as long as the other pieces combined, it limps along through decorative treatments of feeble material, often awkwardly stitched together. This is an extra reason for listeners to be grateful for Goldscheid­er’s golden horn. Geoff Brown

PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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