Adrian Williams dedicated his symphony to Kenneth Woods "for giving me hope". With five premieres and four recordings to its name already this project gives me hope that it will banish the baffling (to me anyway) idea that no one wants to write, play or hear new symphonies today.
The symphony opens with an arresting theme on violins and violas whose first three notes (E♭ - F - C) are soon driving the thematic and harmonic progress. I quickly realised that here was a true symphonic architect: this expansive 50-minute four-movement structure never falters.
Williams treats us to a soundworld of iridescent and kaleidoscopic brilliance, whose spare and steely strength made me think of desert landscapes full of life despite the blazing sun. My mental image was tragically apt for the desolate slow movement at the symphony's heart.
The lento, written as the world witnessed Australia's devastating bushfires in 2020, became a memorial to the tragic loss of so much life, landscape and habitat. Its agonising lament finds space for both desolate stillness and strange, luminous beauty. I found it hugely moving.
One might wonder if like Bruckner 9, Williams couldn't follow such a slow movement but the vast and visionary finale triumphantly proves me wrong.
Australia is the source of the disc's other work, a virtuoso chamber concerto brilliantly performed by soloists from the orchestra.
Sidney Nolan's portraits of antipodean outlaw folk-hero Ned Kelly inspired strong colours, angular lines and hard-edged sound to match their style. Try the stunning #21stCenturySymphony and concerto on my playlist and here's to the rest of the project. spoti.fi/3VeA58t
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
For almost two years orchestras round the world have found ways to carry on making outstanding music despite the formidable ongoing challenges of #COVID19. This countdown of my twelve favourite symphony and orchestral records of the year salutes them all.
Follow my playlist for fresh takes on old favourites and a wealth of wonderful music I'd never heard before 2021. My survey continues until #NewYearsDay 2022 when I reveal my Record of the Year.
I'll let my mother, a Brahms symphony stan for 70 years, review this for me: "Wonderful! Exciting, plenty of oomph and the instruments are all so clear."
1/ On Wednesday I went to a wonderful concert by @EnglishSymphony and @kennethwoods. What a thrill to hear real symphonies played live in a real hall with a real audience for the first time since March 2020. I spent the whole afternoon grinning from ear to ear behind my mask!
2/ We began with music by @emily_doolittle, a composer new to me. Woodwings is based on birdsong from Canada, the country of her birth. Cool, fresh and well-ordered in the first of its five short movements, it evolved into wild and free twilit fantasy by the last. Most effective.
3/ Originally for Wind Quintet, this was the first performance of Doolittle's own arrangement for 10 winds and bass made especially for @EnglishSymphony. An excellent curtain-raiser, the northern saw whet owl and friends certainly whetted my appetite. emilydoolittle.com
First things first: If you care about symphonies AT ALL and don't know Simpson 9 then stop what you're doing and buy this record RIGHT NOW. It will repay you many times over.
2/ "BUY?" I hear you cry, "But Symphs, can't you just post a Youtube link or something?"
No. The single 10-minute extract available online is in poor sound and doesn't begin to convey the cumulative experience this symphony's unbroken 50-minute span can deliver. Don't go there.
3/ You just googled it didn't you? Disappointing wasn't it?
1/ Why not recreate the legendary Akademie concert held #OnThisDay in 1808, by turning off your heating and listening to 4 hours of badly-played Beethoven in the freezing cold?
Here's (nearly) all the music heard that night.
⬇️⬇️⬇️
2/ The evening began with the premiere of the symphony that we now know as No. 6.
Mars, the Bringer of War
Venus, the Bringer of Peace
Mercury, the Winged Messenger
Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity
Saturn, the Bringer of Old Age
Uranus, the Magician
Neptune, the Mystic
1/ "They seem to me to stand ... on the extreme boundary of all that has hitherto been attained by human art and imagination." - Robert Schumann on the quartets Opp. 127 & 130
2/ Beethoven's late quartets are now revered as five (or six) of the supreme masterpieces in all music. Some of the praise is heaped on them in purple prose that I'm too tactful to quote, but which I often find as hard to digest as early audiences found the music to hear.
3/ Many of #BeethovensContemporaries were puzzled or actively hostile. Louis Spohr called them "indecipherable, uncorrected horrors". Yet the quartets, and particularly Op. 127, sprang from the same musical soil that nurtured his greatest public triumph.