1 January 1900

Bennett & Bache: Piano Concertos
CDA67595 

‘Howard Shelley’s recording is superb and in full and lustrous. Sterndale Bennett’s writing is sparkly and agile and Shelley is infinitely dextrous in response. It’s interesting that Mendelssohn conducted the work, for there is much that is Mendelssohnian in it. The virtuosity is of the fluent, sophisticated variety. Yet there is also, rather daringly, a single-line melody (most affecting, too) for piano, simply accompanied by pizzicato strings. The slow movement is a ‘Barcarole’ and has an easy-flow basic rhythm that enables the melodic lines to flourish. A more dramatic middle section finds Shelley impassioned in his delivery of it. This is not the original middle movement; Sterndale Bennett had written (as he called it) a 'Stroll through the meadows', but this had failed to gain any popularity. The fiery middle section gives the concerto some emotional depth. The by turns sturdy and capricious finale forms an apt conclusion’ (Classical Source)
1 January 1900
The Federation of Recorded Music News
Bennett & Bache: Piano Concertos
CDA67595 

‘Bache's individual style and skill in orchestration are unmistakable … it is a masterly work, consisting of three movements linked by piano cadenzas that crewate the impression of a single movement. Strong vivace passages alternate with lyrical elements, the overall work showing a freshness, undoubted musicality and skill in orchestration. The distinguished pianist/conductor Howard Shelley with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra gives an impeccable performance that will surely stimulate interest in a composer whose early death was a great loss to the English tradition and whose work deserves to be explored’ (The Federation of Recorded Music News)
1 January 1900
The Guardian
Bennett & Bache: Piano Concertos
CDA67595 

‘Bennett's sparkling Fourth Piano Concerto, with its lightly worn debts to Mendelssohn and Schumann … the flights of lyrical fancy that make Bennett's piano-writing so engaging. As soloist and conductor, Howard Shelley makes the best possible case for both works’ (The Guardian)
1 January 1900

Bennett & Bache: Piano Concertos
CDA67595 

‘Hyperion's Romantic Piano Concerto series, a wealth of novelties and delights, has reached its 43rd issue … neither composer could wish for a more persuasive advocate than Howard Shelley, who, in his customary role as soloist and conductor, gives us an air-spun brilliance and stylistic elegance very much his own. Most refined of virtuosos, he has been admirably presented and recorded’ (Gramophone)
1 January 1900

Bennett & Bache: Piano Concertos
CDA67595 

‘The Concerto (arguably the best of Bennett's extant concertos) has substantial strengths … it is wonderfully interpreted in this reading, which—with Howard Shelley conducting from the keyboard—has a superb 'one-ness' of conception and realisation … Bache's Concerto … is a quite original and surprisingly successful composition. Structurally, the three movements are continuous and run into each other with a mastery which is wholly remarkable, as are the changes of mood within each movement … Shelley is equally fine in this performance, delivering an account which is musically and technically first-rate in every regard, and demonstrating facets of his artistry which are not so widely appreciated as they certainly deserve to be … Shelley and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra give quite enthralling and deeply impressive performances throughout this disc, and the recording is magnificent. Elizabeth French contributes excellent booklet notes’ (International Record Review)
1 January 1900
Classic FM Magazine
Bennett & Bache: Piano Concertos
CDA67595 

‘Hyperion's Romantic Piano Concerto series is back on top form with this delightful coupling of works by two English composers … the concerto by Francis Bache receives a much-deserved world premiere recording. If you like the concertos of Mendelssohn then you are sure to fall for these. Few pianists can match Shelley in this repertoire—sparkling, crisp articulation, graceful phrasing, and heartfelt lyricism. And all this while conducting from the keyboard. How does he do it?’ (Classic FM Magazine)
1 January 1900

Benno Moiseiwitsch - The complete Rachmaninov recordings, 1937-43
APR5505  Download only 

‘Moiseiwitsch always gives us virtuosity with a human face, as subtly involving as it is dextrous … the transfers are highly successful and the accompanying booklet includes a superb photograph of Moiseiwitsch, his deep-set eyes and expressive all-Russian features once more belying his celebrated remote, on-stage persona’ (Gramophone)
1 January 1900
Audiophile Audition, USA, Gary Lemco
Benno Moiseiwitsch - The complete Rachmaninov recordings, 1937-43
APR5505  Download only 

'Clarity of execution and a supple, flexible approach to rhythm characterize the Moiseiwitsch aesthetic, a synthesis of erotic polish and natural bravura … rarely have brilliant virtuosity and unbridled affection merged so vividly in the music of Rachmaninov' (Audiophile Audition, USA)» More

1 January 1900
The Northern Echo, Gavin Engelbrecht
Berkeley (M), McCabe & Williams: String Quartets & Oboe Quintet
Studio Master: SIGCD350  Download only  Studio Master FLAC & ALAC downloads available

'The dynamic Carducci Quartet present premiers of a selection of contemporary music. Michael Berkeley's Oboe Quintet Into the Ravine, features brilliant playing by oboist Nicholas Daniel. The album is rounded off with John McCabe's String Quartet No 7 and Adrian Williams' String Quartet No 4. Compelling playing' (The Northern Echo)
1 January 1900

Berkeley: A Centenary Tribute
CDH55135  Download only 

‘A superb performance … this is a disc that will yield many pleasures’ (MusicWeb International)
1 January 1900
The Mail on Sunday
Berkeley: A Centenary Tribute
CDH55135  Download only 

‘Ideal for those who want to push out the boundaries of their understanding of the 20th century British musical renaissance’ (The Mail on Sunday)
1 January 1900
The Scotsman
Berkeley: A Centenary Tribute
CDH55135  Download only 

‘As nippy and neat as you’d expect from the Nash Players’ (The Scotsman)
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