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Thursday, May 20, 2021

David Matthews - Symphony No. 4; Cantiga (Various Artists)


Information

Composer: David Matthews
  • (01) Cantiga, Op. 45
  • (05) September Music, Op. 24
  • (06) Introit, Op. 28
  • (07) Symphony No. 4, Op. 52

Jill Gomez, soprano (1-4)
Bournemouth Sinfonietta (1-6)
John Carewe, conductor

East of England Orchestra (7-11)
Malcolm Nabarro, conductor

Date: 2003
Label: NMC

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Review

David Matthews's five-movement Symphony, composed in 1989-90, has an unselfconscious robustness of rhythm that sets up many associations—Nielsen via Simpson, Stravinsky via Tippett, Janacek, even John Adams. But these associations don't submerge the Matthews voice; rather, they serve its purpose, which is to take a fresh look at familiar genres (like the 'hunting horn' finale) and to offer a present-day perspective on well-established but still vital traditions.

Matthews may not qualify as a post-tonal composer, but there is an inherently tensile quality to his musical thinking that makes it vividly contemporary. There is little of that 'untroubled serenity' that sceptical critics seek to attribute to the kind of English pastoral rhapsodizing that can easily seem both parochial and complacent, and the symphony's early stages memorably transform apparently artless melodic flow into purposeful harmonic argument as if in explicit response to such criticism. Even the slow movement's melody is set about with unease, and Matthews's ''slightly manic'' marking for the fast tango of the short fourth movement acknowledges the stressful angles present here. Above all, the finale achieves a terse yet convincing conclusion by integrating its joyous and more turbulent impulses with truly Stravinskian bravura.

This is a polished, characterful performance by the East of England Orchestra. The recording is very bright, and with less depth to the sound than one might like. Even so, the music on this disc is greatly rewarding and highly recommended.

-- Arnold Whittall, Gramophone

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David Matthews (born 9 March 1943 in London) is an English composer of mainly orchestral, chamber, vocal and piano works. He read Classics at Nottingham University and afterwards studied composition with Anthony Milner. He was also encouraged by fellow composer Nicholas Maw and was strongly influenced by Michael Tippett. Although he has written a fair amount of vocal music, Matthews's output as a whole is centred on the classical instrumental and orchestral forms. He has written 13 string quartets, 9 symphonies, 2 violin concertos, concertos for cello, for piano, for oboe, and several symphonic poems.

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5 comments:

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  2. Many thanks for this!
    In case anyone sees this somewhere else and the orchestra for Symphony 4 is listed as Sinfonia Viva, Nabarro founded the East of England Orchestra in 1982. The name was changed to Sinfonia Viva in 2000.

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    1. Sinfonia Viva sounds a lot better. The orchestra is not even from the East of England region.

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