BBC Music Magazine

Vaughan Williams

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Sinfonia antartica*; Symphony No. 9; Norfolk Rhapsody No. 1; The Lark Ascending†

†Lyn Fletcher (violin); *Sophie Bevan (soprano); *Members of the Hallé Choir; Hallé Orchestra/mark Elder Halle CD HLD 7558 106:49 mins (2 discs) The Hallé premiered Sinfonia antartica in January 1953, and recorded it six months later. John Barbirolli was the conductor on both occasions, and his interpreta­tion is generally more visceral and urgent than Mark Elder’s in this Hallé live performanc­e.

Elder, by contrast, puts greater emphasis on the forbidding vastness of the Antarctic icescapes encountere­d by Scott and his colleagues on their ill-fated expedition. His opening Prelude distils a sense of panoramic awe, which deepens in the central Lento to imperilled trepidatio­n as the glacier threatens. The intervenin­g Scherzo, with its famous waddling penguins, is perhaps a touch deliberate, but Elder’s Epilogue is powerfully shaped, the ghostly fade-to-white at the conclusion chillingly inscrutabl­e. The Hallé’s playing mixes grandeur and tragedy, with Sophie Bevan’s siren soprano and the voiceless chorus atmospheri­cally integrated.

The Ninth Symphony, Vaughan Williams’s last, is a studio recording, but if anything even more strongly committed. Elder is keenly attuned to the dark uncertaint­ies that haunt the work, and is particular­ly effective in an ominous account of the opening movement, and a combustibl­e Scherzo. The sound is slightly fuller than in the dryish Bridgewate­r Hall for the Antartica.

Both Norfolk Rhapsody No. 1 and The Lark Ascending come from an earlier Hallé release, but are well worth revisiting. It concludes Elder and the Hallé’s cycle of Vaughan Williams’s symphonies, one which has been consistent­ly gripping in its trenchant honesty and patient empathy for the composer’s idiom. Terry Blain

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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