Artist: Martin Roscoe
Title: James MacMillan: Into the Ferment
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: Chandos
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 01:07:54
Total Size: 301 Mb
Tracklist:01. Britannia
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra 'The Berserking'
02. I. J = 140 + Energico -
03. II. J = 60 -
04. III. J = 104
Into the Ferment
05. The Storm
06. Here are we met, three merry boys
07. In dispraise of whisky
08. We are na fou
09. It is the moon I ken her horn
10. Three merry boys again
11. Wha first shall rise to gang awa
12. Man to Man Shall brithes be
13. Finale
Performers:Martin Roscoe, piano
BBC Philharmonic
James MacMillan
The nine-movement suite Into the Ferment, written for professional chamber ensemble and youth orchestra, may have been revised last year, but most of the music on this disc is relatively ancient by James MacMillan's standards. Britannia dates from 1994, The Berserking and the original version of Into the Ferment from the late 1980s. The results are more exuberant, more anarchic than MacMillan's recent works - and to my ears, at least, all the better for it.
Britannia, written for the Association of British Orchestras, is a collage, Ives-like in its range of references: it quotes from the likes of God Save the Queen and Lilliburlero as well as MacMillan's own music. Like all the best humour, it is underpinned by a serious message, in this case about the follies of petty nationalism. It is also a rather expert orchestral showpiece.
The Berserking is a piano concerto in everything but name, and a big-boned one at that - half an hour of music in three linked movements. The starting point was a Celtic football match, in which the team produced, in MacMillan's words, "a characteristically passionate, frenzied but ultimately futile display". From that he extended the image to the ancient Celtic warriors, the Berserkers, who would work themselves up for a battle in a similarly unfocused way. That swaggering drive fuels the first movement, while the cool, collected centrepiece is an evocation of Celtic folk music and Hebridean psalmody before the macho energy returns again.
It is highly effective and the solo part is given just the right amount of aggressive edge on this recording by Martin Roscoe. There are effective moments, too, in Into the Ferment, which is based on the events in a Robert Burns poem, with occasional clues to a quiet lyricism sheltering beneath the noisy eruptive surfaces.
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