English
Music Festival, Dorchester Abbey, Dorchester-On-Thames
By Roderic Dunnett
Published: 26 October 2006
From:
The Independent
 |
|
| David Lloyd Jones and BBCCO on the
Festival's opening night. |
|
Any festival that boasts Boris Johnson as president sounds
like a boisterous occasion. Heirs and Rebels, the first English
Music Festival to be mounted in and around Dorchester, south
Oxfordshire, is devoted to the "diversity, innovation
and brilliance" of English composers often neglected in
concert programming.
It's a bold venture. Where else would one bump into the
Viola Sonata of Algernon Ashton, a rhapsody by Elgar's supporter
William Reed, and a suite by Benjamin Dale? Or venture into
Lord Berners' Luna Park, and spot Jeremy Irons narrating
Vaughan Williams's An Oxford Elegy?
The five-day festival's opening concert was given by the
BBC Concert Orchestra, which rapidly made its mark with a
blistering fanfare - shades of Tippett and Walton, but cleverly
original - newly commissioned from Gareth Wood. Stylish and
witty, it could win a place in the repertoire.
The chance to hear rare Holst, scintillatingly played, was
welcome. His Walt Whitman Overture of 1899 occupies an attractive
netherworld of post-Meistersinger froth; it could have used
even more élan than it received here.
Clarinet and viola heralding Vaughan Williams's Norfolk
Rhapsody No 1 unleashed a shiveringly beautiful performance,
revelling in the warmth of the folk song idiom, utterly fresh
in its day (1906).
| |
 |
| |
Endymion Ensemble. |
The most bracing work was by Britten's mentor, Frank Bridge.
Oration, his haunting cello concerto, is a passionate outcry
against the ravages of the Great War. The inexorable trudge
of its dark, passacaglia-like cortege, chromatic and knotty,
seemed to sum up the miseries of the Front. Julian Lloyd
Webber proved utterly sympathetic to the angst-ridden solo
line, as the cello strives to extricate a pained and poignant
lyricism from the tensions of the orchestral hinterland.
Lloyd Webber returned for more Holst - his rarely-heard
Invocation (1911) - for a memorable second half contribution.
Yet it was Sullivan who made the running, his Irish Symphony
given the full works, setting the pace for the symphonies
of Stanford to come. Patently English music, and palpably
alive and kicking.
Also in pdf format:
Oxford Times
The
Independent MKCO
Daily Telegraph
Photos: © Copyright English Music Festival 2006