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Goossens - Orchestral Works Volume 2

Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, Sir Andrew Davis

Goossens - Orchestral Works Volume 2
Virtuoso orchestration by a super-skilled composer...Classy performances.

Goossens - Orchestral Works Volume 2

Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, Sir Andrew Davis

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Virtuoso orchestration by a super-skilled composer...Classy performances.

About

This disc marks the beginning of the partnership between the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra and its recently appointed Chief Conductor, Sir Andrew Davis, who already boasts an impressive discography on Chandos.

In the pieces performed here, we find Goossens emerging at the end of World War I as a brilliant and innovative orchestrator, a modernist with a technique derived from Debussy, Ravel, and early Stravinsky. As Director of the New South Wales Conservatorium in Sydney and Chief Conductor of the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, he was phenomenally successful, his achievements earning him international fame.

Four Conceits, Kaleidoscope, and Two Nature Poems all began life as works for solo piano, written during or just after World War I. All were later adapted for orchestral forces, and in steep contrast to the excessive length and opulence of much wartime music, these works (Kaleidoscope and Four Conceits in particular) are conspicuously brief. In fact, only one of the four Conceits exceeds two minutes.

The short tone poem Tam o’Shanter and the four-act opera Don Juan de Mañara were both inspired by literary works. The former illustrates the well-known poem of the same name by Robert Burns, depicting the drunken return from Ayr of Tam on this horse, the uncertain gait of which is heard in the music from the outset. The libretto for Goossens’s opera had been written by Arnold Bennett after a play by Alexandre Dumas, père.

Also closely associated with the arts, Three Greek Dances was written for Margaret Morris whose flowing style of dancing, inspired by Isadora Duncan, we today associate with the 1920s. The piece, in its final form, was first performed in London by Morris and her dancers at the Faculty of Arts, Piccadilly in January 1931.

At the suggestion of their friend the critic Edwin Evans, four composers – John Ireland, Frank Bridge, Arnold Bax, and Eugene Goossens – jointly produced a miniature set of variations on the French folksong ‘Cadet Rousselle’, for soprano and piano. Goossens later arranged the set for orchestra without voice, the version performed here.

Contents and tracklist

I. Good Morning
Track length1:01
II. Promenade
Track length1:29
III. The Hurdy Gurdy Man
Track length1:07
IV. The March of the Wooden Soldier
Track length1:03
V. Lament for a Departed Doll
Track length1:42
VI. The Old Musical Box
Track length0:46
VII. The Punch and Judy Show
Track length0:43
VIII. Good Night
Track length2:00
No. 1. Moderato
Track length3:05
No. 2. Andante languido
Track length4:54
No. 3. Vivo
Track length2:11
I. Fantasia
Track length4:57
II. Chorale
Track length9:38
III. Perpetuum mobile e burlesca
Track length7:24
No. 1. The Gargoyle
Track length1:45
No. 2. Dance Memories
Track length1:20
No. 3. A Walking Tune
Track length2:22
No. 4. The Marionette Show
Track length1:18
No. 1. Pastoral: Andantino grazioso
Track length6:59
No. 2. Bacchanal: Molto allegro
Track length4:24
Don Juan de Manara, Op. 54: Intermezzo
Track length6:21

Awards and reviews

July 2013

Virtuoso orchestration by a super-skilled composer...Classy performances.

May 2013

Chandos's rich sound is up to the usual high standards and outshines Goossens's own 1922 recording of Tam O'Shanter

18th April 2013

It is almost redundant to praise the excellent sound quality of this CD. The same applies to the enthusiastic, but always sensitive and sympathetic playing by the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra and Sir Andrew Davis...This CD is a tremendously important addition to the catalogues.

6th April 2013

listening to this disc is 74 minutes well-spent. Tam O’Shanter’s four minutes whizz by in exhilarating fashion; Goossens knew just how much mileage could be extracted from his musical ideas and none of these pieces outstays its welcome. The Three Greek Dances are nicely evocative, and two suites of orchestrated piano pieces leave you wanting more.
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