Matthews: The Music Of Dawn, Concerto In Azzurro

Album cover art for upc 095115148723
Label: CHANDOS
Catalog: CHAN10487
Format: CD

Guy Johnston (cello) BBC Philharmonic, Rumon Gamba

The Music of Dawn / Concerto in Azzurro / A Vision and a Journey

Gramophone Award Finalist - Contemporary 2009
International Record Review: ‘The reputation of David Matthews has risen steadily over the last few years… among his contemporaries he has few rivals in the creating and sustaining of larger forms.’ Born in 1943 in London, David Matthews was first attracted to the idea of becoming a composer only in his teens, and initially was self-taught. After university, he had formal lessons with Anthony Milner, and worked in Aldeburgh as Benjamin Britten’s assistant. His music represents a continuation of, rather than a challenge to, the great tradition of British music in the twentieth century, placing a strong emphasis on melodic lines and on what has been called ‘a Romantic generosity of expression’. At the same time, it is by no means straightforwardly conservative; it speaks in a highly individual voice, and one that is still evolving. The Times wrote recently: ‘Matthews is among our most conspicuous symphonists, as well as among our stalwart adherents of tonality.’ Chandos adds David Matthews to the bastion of English composers already represented on the label. The BBC Philharmonic and Rumon Gamba showcase two of his symphonic poems, The Music of Dawn and A Vision and a Journey, adding the Concerto in Azzurro for cello and orchestra, performed by Guy Johnston, winner of the Musician of the Year award. All receive their premiere recording. The Music of Dawn was inspired by the painting of the same name by the British artist Cecil Collins, which is reproduced on the cover of this release. Matthews recalls: ‘I regard him as one of the most important painters of the twentieth century. I was particularly struck by the painting called The Music of Dawn. It immediately suggested music as, from its title, it was obviously intended to do. Cecil Collins was the most musical of painters, and I hope that he would have liked the idea of his painting being evoked in the medium of orchestral sound.’ Richly scored for large orchestra, the work is an evocation of the sun, beginning in the pale light of early dawn, and ending in the blaze of noon. The concluding part of the work was composed at Norman Del Mar’s house in North Cornwall. Both A Vision and a Journey and Concerto in Azzurro were commissioned by the BBC. The ‘symphonic fantasia’ A Vision and a Journey was first performed by the BBC Philharmonic in 1993. Concerto in Azzurro is composed as a single large-scale movement, lasting just under twenty-five minutes. It derives its form from the first movement of Bruckner’s Ninth Symphony and is also inspired by a holiday spent on the Island of Lundy and a vision of blueness found there. Peter Marchbank of The Guardian wrote recently of David Matthews, ‘The lyricism shines out and one is instantly aware that this is music by a composer who is very much a part of the great English tradition’.