Malcolm Lipkin
(b.1932) www.malcolmlipkin.co.uk
first came to prominence in 1951 when he played his Third Piano Sonata at the Gaudeamus Foundation Music Week in
Holland at the age of nineteen. Performances of his Fourth Piano Sonata were given by the late Peter Katin and his Piano Concerto by Lamar Crowson with the
BBC Symphony Orchestra, both at Cheltenham Festivals in the 1950s. His First Violin Sonata received its
premiere in London in 1958 by Yfrah Neaman and Howard Ferguson.
It was Yfrah Neaman that commissioned his Violin Concerto No.2, giving its first
performance in 1963 with the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra under Constantin
Silvestri. Three years later, Lipkin's Sinfonia di Roma (Symphony No.1) was
premiered by the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic conducted by Sir Charles Groves.
During the past decade his works have received greater
recognition following the success of The Pursuit (Symphony No.2), first performed
in Manchester in 1983 and his Sun (Symphony No.3) performed by the
BBC Philharmonic in 1993, an orchestra which has now publicly performed all
three of his symphonies.
A steady flow of chamber and instrumental works has included
the Fifth Piano Sonata (1986), Prelude and Dance for Cello and Piano,
written in memory of Jacqueline du Pré and premiered by Robert Cohen and Alan
Gravill at the City of London Festival in 1988 and the Piano Trio (1988), which was commissioned by the English Piano Trio
and first performed by them at the Purcell Room.
His Variations on a
theme of Bartók for String Quartet, one of his major chamber works, was
first heard at the 1992 Newbury Spring Festival, played by the Delmé Quartet. In
the same year his Dance Fantasy for Solo
Violin was the test piece commissioned for the Carl Flesch International
Violin Competition. 1993 brought his Five
Bagatelles for Oboe and Piano, written for Nicholas Daniel and Julius Drake
and performed by them in London at the Wigmore Hall. In 1995 he completed his Duo for Violin and Cello. 1998 saw
another orchestral work, From Across La
Manche, commissioned by the Primavera Chamber Orchestra in 1998 and his
Fifth Piano Sonata that was given a second London performance by its dedicatee,
Jeremy Carter, at the Wigmore Hall.
Another piano work, Nocturne
No.2, was given by Kathryn Stott at the Pianoworks '99 Festival in
Blackheath. On this occasion she also played his Nocturne No.1, written to celebrate the 75th birthday of the
legendary Eileen Joyce. Both these performances were subsequently broadcast on
BBC Radio 3. Lipkin's Nocturne No.4 was
premiered by Stephen Coombs in Brighton. A Second
Violin Sonata, commissioned for Levon Chilingirian and Clifford Benson by
Green Room Music, Royal Tunbridge Wells was first performed in 1998 in
Tunbridge Wells and has since been heard at the Lichfield Festival and in
London.
It is the Sinfonia di Roma (Symphony No.1), The Pursuit (Symphony No.2) and Sun (Symphony No.3) that have just been
released by Lyrita www.lyrita.co.uk in BBC
recordings made in 1988, 1983 and 1993 respectively.
SRCD 349 |
Sinfonia di Roma (Symphony
No.1) (1958-1965) is performed by the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra www.bbc.co.uk/bbcsso conducted by Lionel
Friend http://lionelfriend.com and
recorded in Broadcasting House, Glasgow, Scotland. It is inspired by earlier
memories of the traffic around the Villa Borghese in Rome and is in three
linked movements.
Intrada opens
quietly and gently on a horn motif taken up by various woodwind instruments before
developing. There is a quiet, rather withdrawn nature to the music before it
subtly increases in passion briefly before falling back. It tries to rise again
but soon falls back before weaving slowly and gently through some fine passages
all created from the opening motif. Despite occasional brief outbursts, the
music continues with a quiet, rather pensive feeling before leading straight
into the Scherzo introduced by a brass
ensemble.
The music slowly tries to develop dynamically, with
fragmented motifs. Slowly it gains a forward flow, building in power with brass
and percussion. There are sudden outbursts of brass before, midway, falling to
a hush in a lovely passage. Again the music rises up with staccato brass
creating the feel of a frenzied chaotic scene. It gathers ever more drama and
noise as the music thunders to a sudden conclusion before a brief hush leads us
into the Notturno.
Woodwind, then brass, then strings bring the Notturno but it
is the strings that try to raise the music, but it moves on slowly with many
details from various instruments creating music that is full of interest and
mystery with some lovely use of the orchestra. The music is rarely allowed to
proceed without delay or interruption even though it remains rather quiet. This
is a real Notturno in every sense. There are some lovely combinations of instruments,
providing fine textures and colours as well as attractive brass sonorities and
lovely woodwind passages before arriving at the coda.
This is a first rate performance from Lionel Friend and the
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra.
Edward Downes conducts the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra www.bbc.co.uk/philharmonic in
the one movement The Pursuit (Symphony
No.2) which has as its basis the concept of time and distance. There is a quiet,
gentle string opening before an oboe brings a brief passage. The strings pick
up the pace before brass join, woodwind scurry around and the music builds in
drama and dynamics. A rhythmic undertow pulls the music forward as fragmented
brass motifs arrive before giving way to a longer breathed melody. A gloomier,
serious passage arrives where woodwind chirrup over a quiet orchestra. Soon the music becomes more aggressive as it rises
in drama before moving through passages of fine detail before, rising to an
impressive climax, underpinned by percussion. The brass intone in this terrific
moment before the music drops to a quiet woodwind passage where a lovely theme
is woven.
Midway, the music rises with a grand brass motif that is
repeated, before reducing to a slow, quiet section that follows beautifully
after the drama. There is some fine flowing melody, shared around the
orchestra, led by the strings. A hesitancy does creep in occasionally but
eventually the music again builds in power and passion only to soon drop back
to a hush. An insistent rhythmic motif appears that leads to a riotous brass
passage before a striding rhythmic theme, slowly and decisively pointed up by
bass drum, leads forward. The music
strides confidently, rising impressively with cymbal clashes to a loud climax
before all drops to a hush as oboe and a viola present a repeated motif that
leads to the coda.
This is another very fine symphony. Edward Downes and the
BBC Philharmonic Orchestra deliver a very fine performance indeed well recorded
at BBC Studio 7, Manchester, England in 1983.
Sun (Symphony No.3)
again features the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, this time conducted by that still
underrated conductor Adrian Leaper www.patrickgarvey.com/artists/adrian-leaper.html
in a BBC recording made at the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester,
England in 1993. This symphony takes as its stating point lines from a poem by
17th century poet, Robert Herrick touching metaphysically on the
transience of life.
‘The Glorious Lamp of Heaven, the Sun,
The higher he’s a getting;
The Sooner will his Race be run,
And neerer he’s to Setting.
Lower strings sound out in the opening over which a trumpet
plays a tune taken up by the other brass, then woodwind, underpinned by timpani.
There are real feelings of restrained drama and expectation. The music falls to
a quiet, gentle passage for woodwind and brass before the upper strings try to
raise the music, but the lower strings continue slowly ruminating on the theme.
Gently the music rises again with a cor-anglais, then bassoon and other
woodwind adding to the texture. There is a rising motif and some lovely chirrups
of woodwind as the music slowly speeds up, leading to a frantic, forward moving
passage. Soon a harp and woodwind bring a stiller passage before woodwind lead
on in the same rising motif. Later a broader string passage arrives but the
pensive nature continues. Eventually, by the halfway mark, insistent strings
are heard but are taken over by a repeated woodwind passage where there are some
lovely blends of instruments. The insistent strings resume before we arrive at
a dramatic point. Brass and woodwind shoot out staccato notes but hushed
strings lead on before growing more intense. The music moves through more
passages of woodwind tranquility with lovely little woodwind details before
rising in drama with percussion support. After a brief quieter section,
scurrying strings and timpani lead on as the music rises to a dramatic climax. The music falls to a quiet woodwind section
with rhythmic pulse in the basses before moving to a gloriously hushed coda.
This is a terrific symphony given an excellent performance
by the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra under Adrian Leaper.
All of these BBC recordings are first rate and there are
excellent booklet notes.
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