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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fun,
By philistine (San Diego, California USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Malcolm Arnold: Dances (Audio CD)
Malcolm Arnold's many sets of Anglo-Saxon Dances are fun, light-hearted pieces that capture the folk music of the many cultures of the United Kingdom. This CD features the English, Scottish, Cornish, and Irish Dances (only missing the Welsh). My favorites are the more popular English and Scottish Dances, but the Irish and Cornish are still enjoyable to listen to. These pieces capture melodies that will sound very familiar and that you'll be surprised you've never heard before. After listening to these tunes, you'll catch yourself gaily whistling a Scottish reel.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A really enjoyable recording,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Malcolm Arnold: Dances (Audio CD)
Malcolm Arnold's two sets of English Dances were in many ways his compositional breakthrough, and they are quite delightful miniatures - almost vignette-like, charming, wonderfully colorful, memorably tuneful and quite expertly scored. They are truly wonderful contributions to the repertoire of charming, lighter but still substantial music that encompasses such works as Dvorak's Slavonic Dances and Tchaikovsky's ballet suites. The Scottish Dances that followed a couple of years later are perhaps even more delightful in their semi-folksy, spirited and unabashedly romantic idiom; atmospheric works with several wonderful themes - conservative for their time yet personal in idiom and really sounding like little else. The Cornish Dances are somewhat more troubled - the melodies do not flow as easily and the mood is more overcast and bitingly ironic; the music is still quite beautiful but in a less off-handed manner. The Irish Dances are even more shadowy - the traces of careless joy are rarely allowed to bubble to the surface, and if they do they are soon quenched by something more serious. They are still beautiful and attractive miniatures, even though they are not as good-natured as the English Dances, say.
The performances are quite magnificent, however (although I have not heard the Boult performances that are often counted as the benchmark). The Philharmonia Orchestra play with all the color, atmosphere and subtlety the music calls for, from the joyful exuberance of the earlier sets to the more varied and less unambiguous later pieces. Bryden Thomson clearly loves and cares for the music, and his sense of rhythm, color and momentum is impressive. The sound quality is warm and rich and vivid - the recording is, perhaps, a little close, but the overall impact is marvelous. The disc is filled out with two inconsequential numbers from Arnold's ballet Solitaire, neither of which I would care to hear again. The main offerings, however, are so charming and well performed that the disc as a whole is something of an essential listening.
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