Mozart: Horn Concerto No.3 / Britten: Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings / Schumann: Adagio & Alle
Dennis Brain was a real hero when I was a child. His recordings of the Mozart horn concertos were among the first things I ever heard and my Grandpa’s old LP became a favoured treasure. We also used to go past where his fatal accident was to visit my other grandparents; as my late sister used to say: Dennis Brain was an icon. When his EMI recording came out first on CD in 1988 it was the most played ever, well over 100 times, and kept our young son quiet! I’ve enjoyed the previous three BBC Legends discs - all reviewed by MusicWeb - and this is a real treat. The Mozart is from a Prom in 1953 and is in pretty good mono radio sound. It’s interesting to hear Brain under Sargent as Sir Thomas Beecham famously described Karajan, who would conduct Brain in the studio a few months later as "a kind of musical version of Sir Malcolm Sargent!" It is a splendid performance with just one small fluffed note. Despite the RAH’s infamous acoustics the BBC engineers did a great job capturing this highly evocative rendition. Dennis knew these works backwards and Sargent shows what an underrated conductor he was. As a 12 year old I was taken to New Theatre Oxford to hear him conduct Dvořák’s New World. The slow movement is intensely moving and as in the EMI version the rondo is unique. Sargent provides impeccable accompaniment and the BBCSO play like a dream. There have been horn players since who have played these works splendidly but there was only one Dennis Brain. This is an invaluable addition to the sadly small number of recordings he made. Britten wrote the Serenade for Brain and Pears and here they are at the same Prom nine years after the Decca recording which as the review points out is in very poor sound for 1944. This was conducted by John Hollingsworth who was assistant to Flash Harry (Sargent) and like Brain in the RAF in WW2. Tragically he died very young, like Dennis, in 1963, of pneumonia. From the research I’ve carried out his recordings are mainly of British Film music; here he conducts with great skill and tenderness. The horn sound is captured well and Pears is in sublime form. Some reviewers found his sound recessed but it’s certainly OK for me. Tully Potter’s notes are up to his usual very high standard and as he points out this live recording does have an edge. Just one example "Blow bugles blow" (track 6) shows the special empathy these artists had with Britten, and what a talent he was! … Memories of Owen Wingrave his first opera for TV in the late 1960s. It was news to me that Brain and Pears made two studio recordings but Stephen Pettitt’s Dennis Brain discography shows a recording under Goossens which has only recently come out on an Eloquence CD. I found this whole performance very moving and exhilarating and am delighted to be able to tell others about its joys! Schumann’s Adagio is sometimes played on a cello but it sounds great here. There is a studio recording with the late great Gerald Moore (Testament SBT1022) with exemplorary accompaniment but Britten’s contribution is very spirited and lively. The Mozart Divertimento is tremendous fun as is the piece by Milhaud. The final work by Brain’s friend Fricker is worth hearing. Apparently he was in vogue about the time of the broadcast but is virtually unknown now. It’s not bad but lacks really memorable ‘hooks’. The ensemble with Morris’s wooden flute is in fine form; all a week before Dennis’s last trip. All in all this is another "must have" from BBC Legends. It’s been really interesting learning more of the musical scene at the time and being reminded of a genius sadly taken away at about the same age as Mozart -- David R Dunsmore, musicweb-international.com