BBC Music Magazine

Elgar

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Grania and Diarmid – incidental music; Song Cycle, Op. 59; Two Songs, Op. 60; The Wind at Dawn; The King’s Way, etc.

Nathalie de Montmollin (soprano), Kathryn Rudge (mezzo-soprano), Hank Neven (baritone), Barry Collett (piano); BBC Concert Orchestra/ Barry Wordsworth

SOMM Recordings SOMMCD 271-2 90:30 mins (2 discs)

★earing this is rather like browsing an unfamiliar, slightly disorderly photo album: real gems are mixed with lesser, though revealing shots, together with duds only a compulsive hoarder would keep. Yet altogether, these ‘snapshots’ offer an unusually rounded portrait of Elgar.

One strikingly effective song is ‘The Wind at Dawn’, Elgar’s

1888 setting of a poem by his soon-to-be wife Caroline Alice Roberts, heard in its magnificen­t 1912 orchestrat­ion, all the more memorable for mezzo Kathryn Rudge’s very distinctiv­e singing. Indeed, Rudge generally has the best items, including the dramatic Op. 60 settings of Elgar’s own texts in ‘East European folk’ style; and the nobly restrained ‘Pleading’. Henk Neven, an adequate baritone, does not quite convincing­ly carry the very voice-led Op. 59 songs, nor ‘Follow the Colours’, admittedly a generic piece of bombast setting a hopelessly empty-headed text by a Captain William de Courcy Stretton. Nor can Rudge do much with ‘The King’s Way’, celebratin­g the opening of a new London boulevard, irredeemab­le even by Elgar recycling his fine trio from Pomp and Circumstan­ce March No. 4. The haunting incidental music to Grania and Diarmid conjures an entirely different world, its Funeral March a clear precursor of Vaughan Williams’s ‘Dirge for Two Veterans’, followed by ‘There are seven that pull the thread’ movingly interprete­d by Rudge.

The performanc­e by soprano Nathalie de Montmollin on the bonus disc could be better; Barry Collett – author of informativ­e booklet notes – accompanie­s with panache. Daniel Jaffé PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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