Rubbra - Symphonies 2 & 4
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Label: Somm
Cat No: SOMMCD0179
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Orchestral
Release Date: 2nd February 2018
Contents
Artists
BBC Symphony OrchestraConductors
Adrian BoultEdmund Rubbra
Works
Symphony no.2, op.45Symphony no.4, op.53
Artists
BBC Symphony OrchestraConductors
Adrian BoultEdmund Rubbra
About
The first appearance on disc of Edmund Rubbra conducting the wartime premiere of his own Fourth Symphony (taken from an off-air recording of the live broadcast) is coupled with a live 1954 BBC radio broadcast – considered “quite stupendous” by the composer – of the Second Symphony conducted by the work’s dedicatee, Sir Adrian Boult.
On the strength of his first four symphonies, the musicologist and composer Arthur Hutchings described Rubbra as “first and foremost, a symphonist”. That verdict is brilliantly vindicated here with two finely crafted, superbly contrasted works.
The Second Symphony boasts a language that is utterly original, the entirety of its four-movement arc spun out from the long-breathed noble theme at its opening. In his booklet notes, Robert Matthew-Walker describes it as a “musical tapestry of genuine inner life… building to a powerful climax of considerable nobility of thought”.
So enamoured of the Second was Boult (who had also conducted its first performance in 1938) that he later chose it as one of his Desert Island Discs when he appeared on the iconic BBC Radio 4 programme.
Recently conscripted, Rubbra was dressed in full military uniform when he conducted the premiere of his Fourth Symphony during the 1942 Proms season at the Royal Albert Hall. At once epic and intimate, powerful and poetic, it has, claims his one-time pupil Robert Layton “one of the most beautiful openings not just in Rubbra but in all English music” and a stirring finale of triumphant dimensions that has been likened to Bruckner.
Rubbra’s own introduction to the symphony – first broadcast by BBC Radio five days before its premiere in This Week at the Proms – offers a revealing glimpse into the heart of a mighty and moving symphony.
Both performances have been restored and re-mastered for Somm Recordings by multiple award-winner Ted Kendall.
Symphony no.2 recorded live at Maida Vale Studios, London, 8 October 1954
Symphony no.4 recorded live at the Royal Albert Hall, London, 14 August 1942
Rubbra’s BBC radio introduction broadcast on This Week at the Proms, 9 August 1942
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