BBC Music Magazine

Vaughan Williams

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Symphonies Nos 6 & 8; England, my England* etc *Roderick Williams (baritone); BBC Symphony Chorus; BBC Symphony Orchestra/martyn Brabbins

Hyperion CDA68396 72:38 mins Wonderful as it is to hear the Eighth treated with the respect it deserves, the main focus has to be on Symphony No. 6. Even against formidable competitio­n, Martyn Brabbins impresses handsomely. Nothing is forced – the fury and the anguish, the grandeur and the desolation seem almost to speak for themselves. What’s surprising on first hearing is how the Symphony’s epic sweep is balanced with such focused clarity. Details catch the ear that tend to get lost in the general melée, while the rhythmic articulati­on is sharp and muscular. Of course the superb recording helps, but the microphone can’t bring out things that aren’t already there. It’s all beautifull­y judged, right through to the near-ideal tempo (not hurried but always mobile) for that ghostly, awestruck finale.

The Eighth is a gentler, more personable affair, but the quality of the invention is high, and again felicities of inner detail stand out without spoiling the lyrical flow.

The ingeniousl­y structured first movement makes the greatest effect, but there’s much more than colourful fun and games to the winds-only Scherzo, and the strings’s ‘Cavatina’, and even to the carnivales­que pitched-percussion­heavy ‘Toccata’. The fillers are slight, but England, my England is a reminder that, even when called on to provide a wartime moraleboos­ter, Vaughan Williams just didn’t do crude jingoism. It isn’t great music, but it is oddly touching, even if – or, perhaps, because – it’s so very much of its time. Stephen Johnson PERFORMANC­E ★★★★★ RECORDING ★★★★★

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