BBC Music Magazine

Gipps • Spain-dunk

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Gipps: Violin Sonata, Op. 42; Rhapsody, Op. 27a – Andante; Evocation, Op. 48 – Andante; Spain-dunk: Violin Sonata in C minor; Violin Sonata in B minor – Romance; Les Sylphes

Patrick Wastnage (violin),

Elizabeth Dunn (piano)

Guild GMCD7827 58:31 mins

Two British woman composers, both born in seaside towns on England’s south coast, both represente­d here in useful premiere recordings of music for violin and piano. What differenti­ates them in this selection is the music’s quality and the circumstan­ces of compositio­n, with the younger, more combative Ruth Gipps, born in 1921, easily achieving a more personal voice and tighter grip over her gifts than Susan

Spain-dunk, born in 1880, was ever able to achieve. The purposeful tread of Gipps’s 1954 Sonata, with surprise shifts in mood and material effortless­ly incorporat­ed, ensures agreeable and sometimes arresting listening. Pleasures continue in its shorter companions, particular­ly the enigmatic Evocation of 1956, written for the émigré violinist Marta Eitler in the year of the Hungarian uprising. Vigorous and lyrical playing from Patrick Wastnage and Elizabeth Dunn only further emboldens Gipps’s imaginativ­e flights.

Spain-dunk’s musical horizons were notably more constricte­d. A critic in the 1920s noted that she ‘says a small thing cleanly, in a perfectly familiar style’. So she does, most cleanly of all in the sweetly appealing encore trinket Les Sylphes and Romance, the only movement surviving from a student-era sonata. It’s when she aims for bigger things, as in the Violin Sonata No. 3 (circa 1910), that her path gets muddier, with the violin’s lyrical impulses jostling against overworked piano writing and other signs of effort outdistanc­ing inspiratio­n. Wastnage and Dunn, however, never waver, and present all their excavation­s on this album (as they should) as if they love every single note. Geoff Brown PERFORMANC­E ★★★ RECORDING ★★★

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