Holst: The Planets; The Mystic Trumpeter; Colin Matthews: Pluto
Editorial Reviews
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A super-budget-price rival to Mark Elder's recent recording of The Planets and a real rival in three senses: it is stirring and splendidly played, it includes Colin Matthews's striking appendix to Holst's suite and it adds a rarity that this composer's admirers will want to investigate. Here the new Naxos has a distinct edge: Elder offers the beautiful but fairly well-known Lyric Movement, whereas The Mystic Trumpeter is a substantial (19-minute) hitherto unrecorded work, an impassioned Whitman setting for soprano and orchestra in which Holst is audibly shaking off the Wagnerian trappings of what he called his 'early horrors' and becoming unmistakably himself in the climactic section and the poetic quiet close. It is an important rediscovery, performed with real conviction.Elder's recording, by adding a separate performance of 'Neptune', enables the listener to hear The Planets with or without Matthews's 'Pluto'. This new version does not but, as in Elder's reading, the violin note that links the two is so quiet and so long-held that an early fade-out is easy to manage. As to Lloyd-Jones's performance of The Planets, it is very nearly the equal of Elder's. I say 'very nearly' because Elder's Halle Orchestra play with exceptional delicacy and richness; Elder's musical directorship of the Halle is obviously bearing splendid fruit. In 'Venus' the RSNO's violins are just a shade glassier than the Halle's, but the climax of 'Saturn' is no less powerful and I very much liked the bright, sharp, almost raucous colours of 'Uranus'. There is energy as well as weight to 'Mars' and the big tune of 'Jupiter' is grandly full voiced. Like most people who grew up with The Planets I have distinguished performances from the past (Boult, Sargent, Previn) in my head. Neither Elder's nor Lloyd-Jones's readings have suffered from this. Both are distinguished; I marginally prefer Elder, but now that I have heard it I would not be without The Mystic Trumpeter. Michael Oliver
Holst: The Planets; The Mystic Trumpeter; Colin Matthews: Pluto, Music, Gustav Holst, Colin Matthews, David Lloyd-Jones, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Claire Rutter, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Orchestral, Orchestral & Symphonic, Orchestral Music, Solo Voice(s) and Orchestra, Suite for Orchestra, Vocal
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Holst: The Planets; The Mystic Trumpeter; Colin Matthews: Pluto
Manufacturer: Naxos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005YXIV Release Date: 2002-04-16 |
Tracks:
Customer Reviews:
Updating Holst.......2005-02-01
CD & DVD AUDIO: Familiar, Hearty Planets w rarity Trumpeter.......2003-07-05
Matthews hits the right note for Holst.......2002-06-17
In the midst of all this popularity it is easy to forget just what a quality work 'The Planets' is. This excellent new edition from Naxos, marking their fifteen years as a high selling classical label, provides an excellent stimulus to the memory. The Royal Scottish National Orchestra gives a fine account of itself in its rich, enthusiastic, but never overbearing approach to the score. This should not surprise us, because they are lead in their endeavours by composer Colin Matthews. He has more reason than most to have given Holst's most famous work detailed attention, since he bravely responded to a commission from Kent Negano and the Halle orchestra to write a sequel. His 'Pluto: The Renewer' is included on this disc, along with a stirring rendition of Holst's little known 'The Mystic Trumpeter' (opus 18), based on a poem by Walt Whitman. Clare Rutter (sop) does more than enough to convince us that this orchestral song is worth listening to again.
What of Matthews' endeavours? The Halle first recorded and released 'Pluto' (named after the planet discovered in 1933, a year before Holst died) in 2001, on the Hyperion label. Comparisons with that disc are inevitable. Both are strong, but perhaps not surprisingly Matthews' own baton seems to bring a little greater clarity and contrast to his own composition. The RSNO's performance on 'Mars' and 'Venus' is also much more wilful than that of the Halle, and they match up well to each other on the more meditative movements and sequences too.
Opinion will obviously be divided, but I think Matthews has written a sequel of compelling authority and vision. He segues his composition out of the embers of 'Neptune', picking up its mystical resonance before moving us towards a couple of dissonant climaxes. The conclusion too his piece is mesmerising. There are plenty of Holstian references in this 6 minute 42 second score, but Matthews does not try straightforwardly to 'write Holst'. He is his own man. His piece blends in well with the other Planets - as becomes more apparent on successive listenings to the whole refigured work. But it does not mimic. Its language is inventive, such that only those who feel the need to render modern in inverted commas when they use it as an epithet to music are likely to miss the point.
The Halle give the nervous or traditional listener the 'proper' ending to Holst's suite as well as Matthews' addendum, in case they want to re-programme their CD player accordingly. Naxos and the RSNO go that natural step further by integrating the two without qualification, and they also provide us with a first-rate account of that Holst 'scena' for soprano and orchestra too. A milestone that deserves high praise. My advice would be to get both versions. Then try out some of Matthews' other orchestral works on the 1996 Collins Classic recording, which includes 'Hidden Variables', 'Memorial', 'Quatrain' and 'Machines And Dreams'.
Track Listings:
Track Listings
Pussy Cats [Original recording remastered] [Import]
Tomásek: Eclogues, Op. 35 & 57
The Victor Recordings (1926-29)
That's the Way I Want to Be [Import]