Symphony No. 1 / Symphony No. 2

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YORK BOWEN
Symphony No. 1 / Symphony No. 2
BBC Philharmonic / Sir Andrew Davis

[ Chandos Classics / CD ]

Release Date: Tuesday 26 April 2011

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York Bowen has a distinguished reputation as a composer and was considered to be one of Britain's finest pianists.

"The present release is essential listening: first, because it substantially expands our knowledge of a musician who was clearly neither an anachronism nor merely an Interesting Historical Figure; second, because it is hugely enjoyable on its own terms; and third, because it is so stunningly well played and executed"
(International Record Review)

"Bowen handles his sizeable forces with consummate assurance...Bowen's red-blooded Second Symphony makes for a thoroughly enjoyable, late-Romantic splurge, and is certainly delivered here with unflagging conviction and energy. Production values are all one could desire, with Stephen Rinker's glowingly realistic, richly upholstered sound complementing the consistently polished and affectionate music-making. Recommended, especially if you have a sweet tooth"
(Gramophone)

York Bowen has a distinguished reputation as a composer and was considered to be one of Britain's finest pianists.

In his day he was known as 'The English Rachmaninoff', and Saint-Saëns described him as 'the most remarkable of the young British composers'. The works of York Bowen tend to display a blend of romanticism and strong individuality, and although his influences include the likes of Rachmaninoff, Chopin, Grieg, and Tchaikovsky, his music is also strongly defined by textures and harmonies that are uniquely 'Bowen'. This recording presents the only two surviving symphonies by Bowen: Symphony No. 1 and Symphony No. 2, which are performed here by the BBC Philharmonic under the exclusive Chandos artist Sir Andrew Davis.

Symphony No. 1 was written in 1902 when Bowen was an eighteen-year-old composition student at the Royal Academy of Music. The work is laid out in only three movements (unusual for the time), and requires a relatively modest orchestra. It is a deeply impressive achievement - the beauty and lyricism of the second movement and its myriad of orchestral colourations, together with a unique and often surprising sense of well-being in the finale, demonstrate that here is a genuinely symphonic composer who was not content just to copy established models and appease his professors. At least one movement of this symphony was performed during Bowen's time at the academy, but this recording may well be the first time that the work has been performed in its entirety.

When Bowen composed his Symphony No. 2 just seven years after completing his first, much had happened in the world of modern music, not least in instrumental terms with the acceptance of large orchestras as standard. As a result this work is much larger in scale than his first symphony, and performed with significantly larger instrumental forces too. The finale in particular is spectacular in the way it develops from the tiniest semi-tonal seed into a fiery and almost unstoppable flood of 'Bowen-esque' inventiveness. This symphony is the work of an assured composer who was completely certain in his music's sense of direction and in the positive and life-affirming nature of his compositions.

Tracks:

Symphony No. 1
Symphony No. 2