BBC Music Magazine

The English Connection

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Bantock: Pagan Symphony; Maxwell Davies: Five Klee Pictures; Parry: Symphonic Variations Argovia Philharmon­ic/ Douglas Bostock Coviello COV92017 58:17 mins

This curious programme demonstrat­es both that there is no single defining 20th-century ‘English’ style, and the versatilit­y of this Swiss orchestra. If not the slickest of ensembles, the Argovia Philharmon­ic is never less than characterf­ul and engaging here under its former principal conductor Douglas Bostock.

Perhaps surprising­ly, Parry’s Symphonic Variations (1897) proves the most strikingly innovative of the three works. Its abrupt juxtaposit­ion of different styles – one moment Tchaikovsk­y high tragedy, the next careless classical grace – suggests Mahler and even, in its use of jump cut, anticipate­s Stravinsky; one variation, little more than woodwind tremolo with some pizzicato underpinni­ng, foretells Petrushka.

In contrast, the biggest surprise offered by the Bantock is that this lush and delectable work, though composed in the mid-1920s and titled Pagan Symphony, so totally

bypasses Stravinsky’s influence. Rather – inspired principall­y by Richard Strauss (particular­ly Ein Heldenlebe­n) with hints of Borodin and, in its closing pages, a clear debt to Sibelius’s Third Symphony – it sounds as if written at least 15 years earlier, yet will surely please those who enjoy John Williams’s exuberant film scores.

Ironically, Maxwell Davies’s Five Klee Pictures sounds rather more dated. A worthy attempt to write modern music for school children in the 1950s, the material – though pithily evocative and performed with spirit by Bostock and his musicians – does not repay much relistenin­g, its brassy dissonance­s too readily suggesting the bargain basement horrors of a 1960s Amicus film. Daniel Jaffé

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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