Elgar: Froissart Overture; Three Bavarian Dances; Chanson de Matin; Chanson de Nuit; Three Characteristic PIeces, Op. 10; Romance for Bassoon and Orchestra, Op. 62

The initial flourish over, I was surprised by the deliberateness of James Judd’s initial tempo in Froissart. Chivalry here lifts a rather ponderous lance on high. Yet he gives Elgar’s early overture an enhanced sense of seriousness and nobility that gives an individual slant to what is undoubtedly a highly competitive performance. It’s an interpretation that had me revising my estimate of this well-loved piece, hearing more clearly its pre-echoes of symphonic mastery. The ensuing programme of miniatures makes for attractive

Our rating

4

Published: January 20, 2012 at 4:02 pm

COMPOSERS: Elgar
LABELS: Naxos
ALBUM TITLE: Elgar
WORKS: Froissart Overture; Three Bavarian Dances; Chanson de Matin; Chanson de Nuit; Three Characteristic PIeces, Op. 10; Romance for Bassoon and Orchestra, Op. 62
PERFORMER: New Zealand S0/ James Judd
CATALOGUE NO: 8.557577

The initial flourish over, I was

surprised by the deliberateness

of James Judd’s initial tempo in

Froissart. Chivalry here lifts a rather

ponderous lance on high. Yet he

gives Elgar’s early overture an

enhanced sense of seriousness and

nobility that gives an individual

slant to what is undoubtedly a highly

competitive performance. It’s an

interpretation that had me revising

my estimate of this well-loved piece,

hearing more clearly its pre-echoes

of symphonic mastery.

The ensuing programme of

miniatures makes for attractive

listening, expounded with affection

and a fine sense of Elgarian style.

The taste that once used to scorn

such pieces as Chanson de Matin or

Carissima or the ravishing May Song

has by now, I hope, shut up shop:

as ‘pure music’, these pieces are as

inviolable as Bach. The rarely-heard

Romance for bassoon and orchestra,

poetically expounded by Preman

Tilson, is a definite bonus, and Judd

injects the Bavarian Dances with an

irresistible joie de vivre that reminds

me of Boult’s 50-year-old recording

with the LPO. The symphonist in

the making is also there in ‘The

Marksman’. Above all Judd seems to

understand the mercurial fluidity of

rhythm and tempo that gives Elgar’s

music its distinctive life. It was an

odd editing decision that led to the

Op. 21 Minuet being infiltrated

between the first and second of

the Three Characteristic Pieces,

but neither work is done any

harm thereby.

Naxos’s recording is excellent, and

the question is really whether Judd

adds anything to Neville Marriner’s

classic account of the lighter works

(including the bassoon Romance

with Michael Chapman). Perhaps

not, but this is a splendid anthology

nonetheless, and few save the

composer and Barbirolli have

done Froissart better.

Calum MacDonald

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