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Thursday, April 27, 2023

Eric Coates - Springtime Suite; Four Ways Suite; Saxo-Rhapsody (Andrew Penny)


Information

Composer: Eric Coates
  1. By the Sleepy Lagoon
  2. Springtime Suite: I. Fresh Morning
  3. Springtime Suite: II. Noonday Song
  4. Springtime Suite: III. Dance in the Twilight
  5. Saxo-Rhapsody
  6. Footlights Waltz
  7. Four Ways Suite: I. North
  8. Four Ways Suite: II. South
  9. Four Ways Suite: III. East
  10. Four Ways Suite: IV. West
  11. The Eighth Army March (Version for Orchestra)
  12. Lazy Night
  13. Last Love
  14. High Flight March

Kenneth Edge, saxophone
Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra
Andrew Penny, conductor

Date: 1998 / 2022
Label: Marco Polo / Naxos

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Review

This is a repackaged disc first issued in 1998 on Marco Polo (8.223521) as part of their British Light Music series which featured many well-known names, including Ronald Binge, Robert Farnon, Richard Addinsell and Trevor Duncan. The series included two albums of music by Eric Coates; the other disc contains the pot-boilers such as the ubiquitous Dam Busters March, the evocative London Suites and the wartime favourite Calling All Workers. Still, the first track on this disc, Sleepy Lagoon, is famous as the theme tune to Roy Plomley’s long running Desert Island Discs. Many people may hear this and think it evokes a tropical island in the sun. (In fact, the tune was inspired by the view from Selsey towards Bognor Regis.)
 
Springtime is Coates’s eleventh suite, which has never quite gained much popularity. There are three well-balanced movements. Fresh Morning: Pastorale and Noonday Song: Romance cast a backward glance to a lost pre-Great War idyll. Dance in the Twilight: Valse is optimistic and thoughtful. One of Coates’s most subtle works, the suite deserves to be better known.

I have never really enjoyed the Saxo-Rhapsody, and I cannot tell you why. Its single movement has a ternary structure: an energetic Allegro vivace is bookended by a sympathetic Moderato passage. Unusually for Coates, this is the only orchestral work “that [is] not pictorial or programmatic, but a piece of ‘absolute’ music”. It majors on the instrument’s lyrical characteristics. At the time of composition, serious artists looked suspiciously at the saxophone. But a contemporary critic noted: “when its resources are skilfully exploited, when its melancholy tones are blended with those gender and nobler instruments, it is capable of effects both novel and pleasant”. Kenneth Edge gives a splendid performance here.

Romance is in the air with the pensively titled rhapsody Last Love, described as a song without words. Whatever emotions this dreamy music evokes, this romantic number pushes beyond the trite to something deeper and more expressive. Last Love is one of only two pieces Coates wrote in the fateful year of 1939. The other is the Footlights Waltz, a wistful reflection on Coates’s time working in the theatre. Rob Barnett in his review has described it as “dreamy, silvery and convey[ing] that floating effortlessness so typical of the Coates magic”. It is the third, and probably the best, of only three concert waltzes that the composer wrote; the other two are Sweet Seventeen and Dancing Night.

The Four Ways Suite was dedicated to the conductor Basil Cameron. The idea is to celebrate the four corners of the world. North is a rhapsody on the well-known Scottish tune Ca’ the Yowes. The atmosphere is sometimes pastiche Scots. Next, a “languorous waltz” points South, but it is not clear just how far in this direction. The night-time venues of London are nearer the mark than some more exotic locations. Eastwards, looking to East Asia, is full of oriental clichés. Albert Ketèlbey’s In a Persian Market is never far away from the listener’s memory. Equally stereotypical is West, which majors on things American, especially the charleston. It is a jazz parody, and one of the best. Sadly, the Four Ways Suite did not generate a deal of enthusiasm, and has fallen out of Coates’s repertoire.

Lazy Night (written in 1931, not 1932 as listed) is another “nature work”. Like Sleepy Lagoon, it was inspired by the surroundings of Selsey, but it is more a mood picture than a tone poem. The clue is in its subtitle: valse romance. It is evocative of someone dreaming, perhaps whilst sitting in the garden of a big art deco hotel in Bournemouth, and hearing waltzes in the ballroom, or an early evening stroll in a London park.

The Eighth Army and the High Flight Marches have not retained the popularity of the Dam Buster’s. The former was dedicated to General Montgomery after his victory at Alamein in 1942. Later, it was used as the signature tune for BBC Middle East broadcasts. Once again, the main theme bounces along, and the trio is more invigorating than may be expected. The orchestration is remarkable. High Flight was Eric Coates’s final composition. It was devised for the eponymous film, telling a story of officer cadets training at Cranwell. Coates’s march was incorporated into the film score, which was devised by Douglas Gamley and Kenneth Jones. The movie was a failure, but the march remains a success, and deserves to be heard more often. The “big tune” is every bit as good as The Dam Buster’s March.

The sound quality of this disc is excellent. The playing is enthusiastic and never patronising. The original 1993 liner notes by Michael Ponder are most helpful. The disc introduces repertoire a little beyond the better-known potboilers of the companion Naxos disc (8.555178 - review). That said, there is much wonderful stuff here that deserves the listener’s attention. Optimistically, this delightful re-release will be bought by those Coates’s enthusiasts who missed it thirty years ago.

-- John FranceMusicWeb International

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Eric Coates (27 August 1886 – 21 December 1957) was an English composer of light music and a viola player. He was principal violist of the Queen's Hall Orchestra under Henry J. Wood for 7 years. Coates's music, with its simple and memorable melodies, proved particularly effective for theme music; several of his compositions was used by BBC to introduce its programs. Coates is also well known for his contribution to the film score for The Dam Busters (1955). He made a number of 78 rpm recordings of his music for The British Columbia label and Decca Records; some of these were later issued on LP and CD.

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Andrew Penny is an English conductor who was born in Hull, England. He entered the Royal Manchester College of Music in 1971 to study the clarinet with Sidney Fell. Subsequently he studied with Sir Charles Groves and Timothy Reynish as a postgraduate, and also with Sir Edward Downes. Since 1982 Penny has been Musical Director of the Hull Philharmonic Orchestra. He has made over 35 recordings for the Naxos and Marco Polo labels since 1992. Much of his repertoire is of British Music and includes symphonies by Sir Malcolm Arnold and Havergal Brian and film music by Vaughan Williams and Walton.
https://www.naxos.com/person/Andrew_Penny_31809/31809.htm

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6 comments:

  1. Choose one link, copy and paste it to your browser's address bar, wait a few seconds (you may need to click 'Continue' first), then click 'Free Access with Ads' / 'Get link'. Complete the steps / captchas if require.
    If you are asked to download or install anything, IGNORE, only download from file hosting site (mega.nz).
    If MEGA shows 'Bandwidth Limit Exceeded' message, try to create a free account.

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  2. Could you reupload this album https://musiqclassiq.blogspot.com/2023/03/robert-clara-schumann-johannes-brahms.html?m=1

    to Mega or some other server because no server downloads me, please

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  3. Hi Ronald, please thank you for you effort about these very nice English Light Music collection. Maybe vol. 2 Eric Coates will be published soon? Thanks again.

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