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1PD35 The World of Dennis Brain
Dennis Brain (1921-1957) plays in:
- Tchaikovsky - Symphony No 5 - II Andante
cantabile, con alcuna licenza [Listen]
Dennis Brain (horn), National Symphony Orchestra
conductor Sidney Beer
The second movement of the 5th Symphony is classic
Tchaikovsky with colourful orchestration and a
memorable main theme introduced by a solo horn.
Next the oboe (Leon Goossens) is heard and a new
melody enters and builds up to a powerful climax
but the movement's orchestral tones descend until
the clarinets (Reginald Kell and Bernard Walton)
are left alone to close close the movement. In this
war time performance Dennis Brain is playing with
the National Symphony Orchestra in Decca's first
full frequency range recording, although still
using noisy 78 rpm discs as the carrier for the new
sound.
- Mozart - Cosi fan Tutte - Per pieta ben
mio [Listen]
Joan Cross (soprano), Dennis Brain (horn),
Philharmonia Orchestra conductor Lawrance
Collingwood
Dennis Brain displays grace and delicacy in
accompanying soprano Joan Cross (1900 - 1993) in
Fiordiligi's aria 'Per pieta' in Act II of Cosi Fan
Tutte. Joan Cross had been a successful leading
soprano at London's Saddlers Wells Theatre, a
company she had directed during the war years. The
last ten years of her singing career she was
associated with the operas of Benjamin Britten
starting with "Peter Grimes" in 1945.
- Beethoven - Horn Sonata in F major Op.17
[Listen]
Dennis Brain (horn) Dennis Matthews (piano)
Beethoven wrote this sonata in 1800 for Giovanni
Punto (1746-1803) a virtuoso horn player who had
moved to Vienna that year after resigning from a
conducting post in Paris. The performance on this
disc is the sound track from a film made by Ken
Cameron (available on Yesterday's Britain DVD
Classical Music in the Forties) as a
pilot for the "We Make Music" films that were to
feature most of the instruments of the orchestra
demonstrated by leading exponents.
- Edward Williams - Open House [Listen]
Natalie James (oboe), Bernard Walton (clarinet),
Dennis Brain (horn), Cecil James (bassoon)
Edward Williams used a wind quartet for the British
Transport Films short "Open House" which toured
stately homes that could be reached from London by
Green Line Coach. For this compact disc I have
edited the original music session takes into a
continuous piece. After serving in the Royal Navy
during World War II Edward Williams joined Denham
Studios music department and from 1948 wrote many
scores for British documentary films. In more
recent times Williams has been associated with the
BBC Natural History unit , most notably the Life
on Earth series.
- Dukas - Villanelle[Listen]
Dennis Brain (horn), Gerald Moore (piano)
Dukas wrote much music but being a perfectionist
destroyed most of it. The Villanelle is one of the
few works that survived. It is a portrait of a
country girl. The music cleverly woven out of a
simple theme.
- Benjamin Britten - Serenade for tenor, horn
and strings [Listen]
Peter Pears (tenor), Dennis Brain (horn), strings
of the New Symphony Orchestra of London, conductor
Sir Eugene Goossens
Six vocal nocturnes are framed by two gentle and
beguiling horn solos. The six nocturnes are
Pastoral (Cotton), Nocturne (Tennyson), Elegy
(Blake), Dirge (Anon., 15th century), Hymn (Ben
Jonson) and Sonnet (Keates). This performance is
the second of two recorded by Dennis Brain for
Decca. The other performance featured the composer
and Peter Pears (1910-1986). On this occasion
Britten was indisposed so Eugene Goossens
(1893-1962) step in.
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