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Bliss: The Composer Conducts

COMPANY: Somm Recordings
CATEGORY: CD
COMPOSER: Arthur Bliss
Product: 758871503921
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Sir Arthur Bliss (1891 – 1975) was an excellent conductor of his own music, but he sadly made only a limited number of commercial recordings. SOMM celebrates the 50th anniversary of Bliss’s death with a 2-CD set of important archive performances, all but two of which he didn’t record commercially, making them of particular interest.

These live performances, mostly recorded at the BBC Proms and not previously made available, are skilfully remastered by long-time SOMM collaborator and executive producer, Lani Spahr. At the invitation of Edward Elgar, Bliss wrote a new work for the Three Choirs Festival in 1920. He was inspired by a book on heraldry to compose a full-scale symphony incorporating symbolic meanings associated with primary colours. Hence, the four movements of A Colour Symphony are Purple, Red, Blue, and Green. The performance issued here is with Bliss conducting his 70th birthday concert at the Proms in 1961. For his 75th birthday concert at the Proms in 1966, Bliss conducted his Piano Concerto, commissioned by the British Council in 1939. Bliss and his younger brother served during World War I, and Kennard was killed at the Battle of the Somme.

In 1930, haunted by nightmares of the war and grief about his brother, Bliss composed Morning Heroes, dedicating it “to the memory of my brother Francis Kennard Bliss and all other comrades killed in battle.” The work is a symphony for orator, chorus, and orchestra, with poetry ranging from The Iliad to Walt Whitman and Wilfred Owen. Lady Bliss considered the pre-eminent orator of this work to be Donald Douglas, featured here with Bliss in 1968—surprisingly, the only performance to date of Morning Heroes at the Proms. The much-revised Concerto for Two Pianos is presented in a version for two pianos and three hands, which Bliss arranged after Cyril Smith suffered a stroke that paralysed his left arm. This performance with Bliss leading Cyril Smith, Phyllis Sellick, and the BBC Symphony Orchestra is from the 1969 Proms.

Two shorter works complete this Bliss anniversary tribute. Mêlée Fantasque from 1921, influenced by Sergei Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes, is a precursor to many ballet scores Bliss would produce. The Phoenix, subtitled “Homage to France August 1944,” is noted in the score as symbolizing “the imperishable life and the transcendent beauty of France.”


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Opera Compact Disc › Classical › Orchestral music ›

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