Recordings
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Bantock: Orchestral Music
CDS44281/6
6CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
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Bantock: The Cyprian Goddess & other orchestral works
CDA66810
Archive Service; also available on CDS44281/6
Download currently discounted
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Details
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Theme: Lento molto
Track 6 on CDS44281/6
CD3 [1'51]
6CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Variation 01: Allegro molto con fuoco
Track 7 on CDS44281/6
CD3 [0'45]
6CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Variation 02: Poco tranquillo
Track 8 on CDS44281/6
CD3 [0'52]
6CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Variation 03: Allegretto scherzando
Track 9 on CDS44281/6
CD3 [1'56]
6CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Variation 04: Molto moderato quasi religioso
Track 10 on CDS44281/6
CD3 [0'42]
6CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Variation 05: Capriccioso
Track 11 on CDS44281/6
CD3 [1'17]
6CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Variation 06: Poco agitato
Track 12 on CDS44281/6
CD3 [1'01]
6CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Variation 07: Lento molto e sostenuto
Track 13 on CDS44281/6
CD3 [1'44]
6CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Variation 08: Con moto affettuoso
Track 14 on CDS44281/6
CD3 [1'27]
6CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Variation 09: Allegro impetuoso
Track 15 on CDS44281/6
CD3 [1'01]
6CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Variation 10: Non più Allegro
Track 16 on CDS44281/6
CD3 [1'32]
6CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Variation 11: Andante doloroso
Track 17 on CDS44281/6
CD3 [2'01]
6CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Variation 12: Finale. Allegro appassionato
Track 18 on CDS44281/6
CD3 [3'09]
6CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
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They were married in 1898, and the following year he wrote Helena, variations on a theme derived from the initials of his wife’s name (HFB: in German musical notation, B natural, F, B flat). The piano score is dated 27 October 1899; Granville and Helena were both thirty-one. In less than a year the music was published by Breitkopf & Härtel. Printed on the flyleaf the composer wrote: ‘Dearest Wife! Accept these little Variations with all my heart’s love. They are intended as an expression of my thoughts and reflections on some of your moods during a wearisome absence from each other.’
Elgar’s Enigma Variations had been first performed in London on 19 June 1899 and created a great stir. Bantock had invited Elgar to conduct a concert with his orchestra at New Brighton, and soon afterwards Edward and Alice Elgar (not yet Lady Elgar) came to stay; Elgar’s wife would have been fifty. Helena Bantock noted with astonishment ‘no less than seven hot water bottles being filled for his bed, on the occasion of Elgar complaining of a slight chill’. On 16 July Elgar conducted the concert, including Enigma, and one cannot imagine Bantock being other than thrilled. It seems highly probable that Bantock then impulsively set out to write his own variations, albeit based Pauline-like on his wife’s moods rather than his various friends. It was his first orchestral work in his mature style. Could it be that in emulating Elgar by ending in high spirits it was not only Helena he was celebrating in the Finale. First performed in Antwerp on 21 February 1900 where Bantock had been asked to conduct a concert of British music, the Variations received their first British performance, conducted by the composer, on 25 March in the Philharmonic Hall Liverpool.
from notes by Lewis Foreman © 1995