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Vernon Handley, BBC Philharmonic - Bax: The Symphonies (2003) [Hi-Res]

Vernon Handley, BBC Philharmonic - Bax: The Symphonies (2003) [Hi-Res]
  • Title: Bax: The Symphonies
  • Year Of Release: 2003
  • Label: Chandos
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: flac 24bits - 96.0kHz +Booklet
  • Total Time: 05:55:13
  • Total Size: 5.05 gb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist

CD1
01. First Symphony: I. Allegro moderato e feroce - Moderato espressivo
02. First Symphony: II. Lento solenne
03. First Symphony: III. Allegro maestoso - Allegro vivace ma non troppo presto
04. Third Symphony: I. Lento moderato - Allegro moderato
05. Third Symphony: II. Lento
06. Third Symphony: III. Moderato - Più mosso

CD2
01. Second Symphony: I. Molto moderato - Allegro moderato
02. Second Symphony: II. Andante - Più mosso - Poco largamente
03. Second Symphony: III. Poco largamente - Allegro feroce - Meno mosso
04. Fourth Symphony: I. Allegro moderato
05. Fourth Symphony: II. Lento moderato - Più mosso
06. Fourth Symphony: III. Allegro - Allegro scherzando

CD3
01. Fifth Symphony: I. Poco lento - Allegro con fuoco
02. Fifth Symphony: II. Poco lento - Molto tranquillo
03. Fifth Symphony: III. Poco moderato - Allegro - Lento
04. Sixth Symphony: I. Moderato - Allegro con fuoco
05. Sixth Symphony: II. Lento, molto espressivo - Andante con moto
06. Sixth Symphony: III. Introduction. Lento moderato - Poco più vivo

CD4
01. Rogue's Comedy Overture
02. Tintagel
03. Seventh Symphony: I. Allegro - Poco meno mosso
04. Seventh Symphony: II. Lento - Più mosso. In Legendary Mood
05. Seventh Symphony: III. Theme and Variations. Allegro

CD5
01. Interview with Vernon Handley by Andrew McGregor: Introduction
02. Interview with Vernon Handley by Andrew McGregor: Bax and Vaughan Williams
03. Interview with Vernon Handley by Andrew McGregor: Bax and His Musical Influences
04. Interview with Vernon Handley by Andrew McGregor: First Symphony
05. Interview with Vernon Handley by Andrew McGregor: Second Symphony and Third Symphony
06. Interview with Vernon Handley by Andrew McGregor: Fourth Symphony
07. Interview with Vernon Handley by Andrew McGregor: Fifth Symphony
08. Interview with Vernon Handley by Andrew McGregor: Sixth Symphony
09. Interview with Vernon Handley by Andrew McGregor: Seventh Symphony
10. Interview with Vernon Handley by Andrew McGregor: Epilogue

This Bax symphony cycle comes under the baton of the composer's doughtiest champion, and superlatives are in order. Even seasoned Baxians will be startled by the propulsive vigour and sinewy strength of these performances.
In its uncompromising thrust and snarling tragedy, Handley's account of the First Symphony packs an almighty punch, but also quarries great detail from Bax's darkly opulent orchestration. In the closing pages the motto theme's sanguine tread is soon snuffed out, as the shredded nerve-ends of this music are exposed as never before.
The wild and brooding Second generates less heady sensuality than either the Thomson or Myer Fredman's pioneering Lyrita version, but there's ample compensation in the chaste beauty and enviable authority of Handley's conception.
Scrupulous attention is paid to thematic unity and the many contrapuntal and harmonic felicities that bind together the progress of this extraordinary canvas. The BBC Philharmonic respond with such eager application that it's easy to forgive some slight loss of composure in the build-up to the cataclysmic pinnacle.
There can be no reservations about the Third, an interpretation that's by far the finest since Barbirolli's 1943-4 world première recording with the Hallé. Bax's iridescent textures shimmer and glow, bass lines stalk with reassuring logic and solidity, and these exemplary artists distil all the poetry and mystery in the ravishing slow movement and epilogue. Deeply moving is Handley's tender, unforced handling of the first movement's Lento moderato secondary material.
Handley's previous recording of the Fourth is comprehensively outflanked by this bracing remake. If you've ever regarded the Fourth as something of a loose-limbed interloper in the Bax canon, this will make you think again, such is the muscular rigour Handley locates in this lovable creation. At the same time, there's playful affection, rhythmic bite and pagan splendour of both outer movements.
Revelations abound, too, in the Fifth. Handley plots a superbly inevitable course through the first movement. At the start of the slow movement the glinting brilliance and sheen of the orchestral playing take the breath away, as does the richness of the lower strings in the first subject.
The finale is stunning, its whirlwind Allegro a veritable bevy of cackling demons.
The bass ostinato that launches the Sixth picks up where the epilogue of the Fifth left off. A taut course is steered through this stormy first movement, though in some ways Norman Del Mar's recording got closer still to the essence of Bax's driven inspiration. The succeeding Lento has a gentle radiance that's very affecting. However, it's in the innovatory finale where Handley pulls ahead of the competition, cannily keeping some power in reserve, and locating a transcendental wonder in the epilogue.
Handley's Seventh is wonderfully wise and characterful music-making, the first movement in particular sounding for all the world as if it was set down in a single take. There's bags of temperament about the performance, as well as an entrancing freedom, flexibility and purposefulness that proclaim an intimate knowledge of and total trust in the composer's intentions. The BBC Philharmonic respond with unflagging spirit and tremendous body of tone.
A majestic Tintagel and rollicking account of the 1936 Rogue's Comedy Overture complete the feast. Disc 5 houses an hour-long conversation about Bax the symphonist between the conductor and Andrew McGregor. Stephen Rinker's engineering does fabulous justice to Bax's imaginative and individual orchestration, particularly towards the lower end of the spectrum.


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