49:42
Arnold Bax - Symphony No. 3 (1929)
The best recording of this work by a mile. Conducted by Bryden Thomsom with the Ulster Orc...
published: 09 Nov 2011
author: GoldieG89
Arnold Bax - Symphony No. 3 (1929)
The best recording of this work by a mile. Conducted by Bryden Thomsom with the Ulster Orchestra. I. Lento - Moderato - 00:00 II. Lento - 20:50 III. Moderato - Epilogue - 33:56 Bax started work in earnest on his Symphony No.3 during the winter of 1928-29. In a cold room at the Station Hotel in Morar, on the west coast of Scotland, he developed the sketches he had made at home in London into what was to prove at one time the most popular of his symphonies. He dedicated the work, described by the viola-player Bernard Shore as 'as thrilling to playas to listen to,' to Sir Henry Wood, a champion of his music, who conducted the first performance of the symphony in March 1930. The work is scored for a large orchestra and includes in its percussion section side drum, bass drum and tenor drum, cymbals, tambourine, glockenspiel, xylophone, celesta, gong and anvil. The first of the three movements, scored initially for wind instruments, offers a mysterious opening bassoon melody that slowly unwinds, its first three notes later to assume unifying importance. The lower strings introduce a new element, an accompaniment to solemn open chords from the brass, before the music grows faster and more urgent in tone, with the emergence of a new and insistent rhythmic theme, leading to a dynamic climax. The music subsides into a gentler mood, led by five solo violins into a second section of greater serenity, slowly developed before the interruption of the figure with which the movement had <b>...</b>
14:51
Arnold Bax : In Memoriam (1916)
This symphonic piece, composed by Arnold Bax 'In the memory of Patrick Pearse' (18...
published: 17 May 2011
author: newhope123
Arnold Bax : In Memoriam (1916)
This symphonic piece, composed by Arnold Bax 'In the memory of Patrick Pearse' (1879-1916), is performed by The BBC Philharmonic, conducted by Vernon Handley
14:42
"Tintagel", by Arnold Bax (1883-1953)
(Sound is slightly better at 480p quality) Taken from the CD sleeve notes: Perhaps the bes...
published: 10 Feb 2012
author: 1970SWP
"Tintagel", by Arnold Bax (1883-1953)
(Sound is slightly better at 480p quality) Taken from the CD sleeve notes: Perhaps the best known of all his orchestral works Bax's Tintagel is a vivid tonal impression of the castle-crowned cliff of Tintagel in Cornwall. Here the legends of King Arthur and the scenic grandeur of the Atlantic Ocean fired Bax's imagination into producing some of the most vivid sea music ever written. Bax himself wrote that the music brought, "...thoughts of many passionate and tragic incidents in the tales of King Arthur and King Mark... and that the piece ends as it began, with a picture of the castle still proudly fronting the sea and wind of centuries" This is a full-throated performance by the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, conducted by David Lloyd-Jones. Celtic music, played by a celtic ensemble. Stirring!
7:51
Sir Arnold Bax: Winter Legends III movement - Part I
The beautiful third movement from Winter Legends, a masterpiece of the British composer Ar...
published: 17 Aug 2008
author: lawrxe
Sir Arnold Bax: Winter Legends III movement - Part I
The beautiful third movement from Winter Legends, a masterpiece of the British composer Arnold Bax. The wonderful landscapes in this video are paintings of the Ukrainian artist Nelly Shenklyarska.
12:53
Arnold Bax - Éire Trilogy: Into the Twilight (1/3)
Éire Trilogy I. Into the Twilight (1908) Éire is a triptych of three early s...
published: 25 Nov 2010
author: musicanth
Arnold Bax - Éire Trilogy: Into the Twilight (1/3)
Éire Trilogy I. Into the Twilight (1908) Éire is a triptych of three early symphonic poems by English composer Arnold Bax (1883-1953). In 1902, when Bax discovered the world of Celtic mythology and culture through the poetry of WB Yeats, he travelled to Ireland, studied its history and learned to read Irish Gaelic. Originally a Wagnerite, Bax began to incorporate elements of Irish music into his harmonic idiom; he also was influenced by (and an influence on) the French Impressionist composers, such as Debussy and Roussel, as well as his compatriot Frederick Delius. In November 1907, Bax wrote a five-act play based on the legend of Deirdre from Irish mythology. He had been planning to adapt this play as the libretto of a future opera, but he soon gave up this project. Instead of discarding his musical sketches for the opera, he moulded them into a trilogy of "symphonic pictures," with the planned prelude becoming "Into the Twilight," after the poem of the same name by Yeats. The two companion pieces are the tone poems "In the Faery Hills" (1909) and "Rosc-catha" (1910), which also incorporate music from the abandoned opera. According to Bax, "[Into the Twilight] seeks to give a musical impression of the brooding quiet of the Western Mountains at the end of twilight, and to express something of the sense of timelessness and hypnotic dream which veils Ireland at such an hour." Other thematic material from this work is derived from the unifinished tone poem "Cathaleen-ni <b>...</b>
18:48
Arnold Bax "November Woods" Tone-poem
"November Woods", Tone-poem by Arnold Bax (1883-1953) Ulster Orchestra Bryden Th...
published: 13 Oct 2011
author: gioiellidellamusica
Arnold Bax "November Woods" Tone-poem
"November Woods", Tone-poem by Arnold Bax (1883-1953) Ulster Orchestra Bryden Thomson, conductor Belfast, VI.1982
20:06
Arnold Bax - To the Name above every Name
The music of Arnold Bax (1883-1953) To the Name above every Name for soprano, chorus and o...
published: 22 Jan 2012
author: ClassicsCafe
Arnold Bax - To the Name above every Name
The music of Arnold Bax (1883-1953) To the Name above every Name for soprano, chorus and orchestra (1923) BBC Philharmonic with Martyn Brabbins label - Chandos
40:06
Arnold Bax - Symphony No. 2 (1926)
Conducted by David Lloyd-Jones with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. I. Molto Modera...
published: 25 May 2012
author: GoldieG91
Arnold Bax - Symphony No. 2 (1926)
Conducted by David Lloyd-Jones with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. I. Molto Moderato - 00:00 II. Andante - 16:47 III. Poco Largamente - 28:57 Bax eventually completed his Symphony No. 2 in E minor and C major in 1926, after intermittent work for the previous two years. It was dedicated to Sergey Koussevitzky who, after protracted negotiations with Bax, conducted the first two performances in Boston with the Boston Symphony Orchestra on 13th and 14th December 1929. Eugene Gooseens conducted the first London performance with the Queen's Hall Orchestra on 20th May 1930. The symphony is scored for piccolo doubling flute, two other flutes, two oboes, cor anglais, three clarinets, bass clarinet, two bassoons, double bassoon, four horns, three trumpets, two tenor trombones, bass trombone and tenor and bass tuba. A varied percussion section includes timpani, bass drum, tambourine, cymbals, xylophone, glockenspiel, celesta, piano and two harps. Use is made of the organ and the orchestra is completed by the usual strings. In a perceptive analysis of the symphony, Lewis Foreman has drawn attention to the four ideas heard in the Molto moderato introductory section to the first movement, motifs that recur, particularly in the first and third movements. The first of these appears, dark-hued, over a bass drum roll, near the beginning of the work. The eighth bar brings a second sombre element, introduced by the cor anglais, clarinet and bassoon. A short but significant motif is <b>...</b>
18:41
Arnold Bax - Trio in One Movement
Arnold Bax : Trio in One Movement Bartók Trio Joanna Klimaszewska - Violin Hannah Y...
published: 05 May 2012
author: toscaplayer90
Arnold Bax - Trio in One Movement
Arnold Bax : Trio in One Movement Bartók Trio Joanna Klimaszewska - Violin Hannah Yip - Piano Max Mausen - Clarinet Arrangement by Robert Plane Recorded at the Guildhall School of Music in March 2012.
32:32
Arnold Bax - Symphony No. 1 (1921)
Conducted by David Lloyd-Jones with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. I. Allegro Mode...
published: 25 May 2012
author: GoldieG91
Arnold Bax - Symphony No. 1 (1921)
Conducted by David Lloyd-Jones with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. I. Allegro Moderato E Feroce - 00:00 II. Lento Solenne 13:42 III. Allegro Maestoso - 24:04 Bax completed his Symphony No.1 in E flat, not the first he had written, in 1921 in piano score, finishing the orchestration of the work by the following year. The slow movement he had written for what was originally to have been his third piano sonata was replaced by an orchestral movement that reflected more adequately the events of recent years. The symphony may be heard as a reaction not only to the tragedy of the war that had just finished, but even more to the tragedy of Ireland and the frustrated idealism and sacrifice of the Easter Rising of 1916. He calls for a large orchestra with four flutes, doubling also piccolo and bass flute, two oboes, cor anglais and heckelphone or bass oboe, four clarinets, including one doubling with an E flat clarinet and a bass clarinet, two bassoons and a double-bass sarrusaphone or double bassoon, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, two harps, a percussion section including timpani, tenor, bass and side drum, gong, cymbals, triangle, glockenspiel celesta and xylophone, together with the usual strings. The use of lower pitched wind instruments gives a darker colour to much of the writing, with a telling use of percussion, the side drum with loosened snare in the slow movement, and the pointing of themes by the subtle very occasional use of celesta or <b>...</b>
14:14
Arnold Bax - Harp Quintet (1919)
Quintet for harp and strings (1919) This is a single-movement work for harp and string qua...
published: 02 Apr 2011
author: musicanth
Arnold Bax - Harp Quintet (1919)
Quintet for harp and strings (1919) This is a single-movement work for harp and string quartet by English composer Arnold Bax (1883-1953). He wrote the harp quintet at the time of his first visit to Ireland following the First World War. This visit led to Bax's lifelong fascination with Ireland and Irish mythology. Mobius Ensemble [Philippe Honoré, Maya Iwabuchi (violins), Vicci Wardman (viola), Sally Pendlebury (cello), Alison Nicholls (harp)]
14:44
Arnold Bax Sonatina for Clarinet and Piano
Arnold Bax Sonatina for Clarinet and Piano...
published: 15 Nov 2011
author: koninete84
Arnold Bax Sonatina for Clarinet and Piano
Arnold Bax Sonatina for Clarinet and Piano
8:29
Sir Arnold Bax: Fairy Tale for cello and piano
Rarely performed work for violoncello and piano played by Czech cellist Petr Nouzovsk&yacu...;
published: 04 Apr 2012
author: 4444vlasta
Sir Arnold Bax: Fairy Tale for cello and piano
Rarely performed work for violoncello and piano played by Czech cellist Petr Nouzovský and American pianist Patricia Goodson.
3:33
Sir Arnold Bax: Tintagel (Intro)
Sir Arnold Bax: Tintagel (Intro) The astounding and magnificent introduction to Bax's ...
published: 01 Aug 2009
author: IncaRoad01
Sir Arnold Bax: Tintagel (Intro)
Sir Arnold Bax: Tintagel (Intro) The astounding and magnificent introduction to Bax's Tintagel. Listen and enjoy.
6:37
Arnold Bax : Symphony 2 : Ending - Virnon Handley
Fatalistic music from the English composer Arnold Bax. Doomsday....
published: 16 Apr 2012
author: Berrik501
Arnold Bax : Symphony 2 : Ending - Virnon Handley
Fatalistic music from the English composer Arnold Bax. Doomsday.
9:43
Arnold Bax - Elegiac Trio
Arnold Bax Elegiac Trio for Flute, Viola and Harp...
published: 08 Mar 2010
author: suprememaison
Arnold Bax - Elegiac Trio
Arnold Bax Elegiac Trio for Flute, Viola and Harp
43:00
Arnold Bax: Symphony #5
00:00 - 17:37 - I Poco lento - Allegro con fuoco - Moderato 17:37 - 29:05 - II Poco lento ...
published: 21 Feb 2012
author: pastrychef1985
Arnold Bax: Symphony #5
00:00 - 17:37 - I Poco lento - Allegro con fuoco - Moderato 17:37 - 29:05 - II Poco lento 29:05 - end - III Poco moderato - Allegro - Epilogue (Doppio movimento alla breve) Bryden Thomson, London Philharmonic Orchestra
9:06
GLAMOUR-SIR ARNOLD BAX ORCHESTRATED BY RODNEY NEWTON
MARTYN HILL, tenor WITH THE LONDON PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA-BRYDAN THOMSON...
published: 20 Jun 2012
author: ransome51
GLAMOUR-SIR ARNOLD BAX ORCHESTRATED BY RODNEY NEWTON
MARTYN HILL, tenor WITH THE LONDON PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA-BRYDAN THOMSON
9:49
Matthew Fontana; Sir Arnold Bax clarinet sonata. 1st movement
...
published: 19 Mar 2012
author: Matthew Fontana
Matthew Fontana; Sir Arnold Bax clarinet sonata. 1st movement
17:53
Arnold Bax - Christmas Eve: Symphonic Poem (1912)
Christmas Eve (1912) A symphonic poem by British composer Arnold Bax (1883-1953), which he...
published: 24 Dec 2010
author: musicanth
Arnold Bax - Christmas Eve: Symphonic Poem (1912)
Christmas Eve (1912) A symphonic poem by British composer Arnold Bax (1883-1953), which he composed while staying at Glean na Smól in County Dublin in Ireland. The work was originally premiered in 1913 as "Christmas Eve on the Mountains", but the composer revised the work and abridged the title twenty years later. Organ: Malcolm Hicks Conductor: Bryden Thomson London Philharmonic Orchestra
9:18
Elegiac Trio - Arnold Bax
A trio performs Bax's Elegiac Trio for Brianna Spargo's junior harp recital at the...
published: 11 Jun 2012
author: DOAer
Elegiac Trio - Arnold Bax
A trio performs Bax's Elegiac Trio for Brianna Spargo's junior harp recital at the University of Washington on January 27th, 2012. Flute - Sho Kato Viola - Olivia Thomas Harp - Brianna Spargo
10:48
Arnold Bax - Éire Trilogy: Rosc-catha (3/3)
Éire Trilogy III. Rosc-catha (1910) Éire is a triptych of three early sympho...
published: 25 Nov 2010
author: musicanth
Arnold Bax - Éire Trilogy: Rosc-catha (3/3)
Éire Trilogy III. Rosc-catha (1910) Éire is a triptych of three early symphonic poems by English composer Arnold Bax (1883-1953). In 1902, when Bax discovered the world of Celtic mythology and culture through the poetry of WB Yeats, he travelled to Ireland, studied its history and learned to read Irish Gaelic. Originally a Wagnerite, Bax began to incorporate elements of Irish music into his harmonic idiom; he also was influenced by (and an influence on) the French Impressionist composers, such as Debussy and Roussel, as well as his compatriot Frederick Delius. In November 1907, Bax wrote a five-act play based on the legend of Deirdre from Irish mythology. He had been planning to adapt this play as the libretto of a future opera, but he soon gave up this project. Instead of discarding his musical sketches for the opera, he moulded them into a trilogy of "symphonic pictures," with the planned prelude becoming "Into the Twilight," after the poem of the same name by Yeats. The two companion pieces are the tone poems "In the Faery Hills" (1909) and "Rosc-catha" (1910), which also incorporate music from the abandoned opera. According to Bax, "[Into the Twilight] seeks to give a musical impression of the brooding quiet of the Western Mountains at the end of twilight, and to express something of the sense of timelessness and hypnotic dream which veils Ireland at such an hour." Other thematic material from this work is derived from the unifinished tone poem "Cathaleen-ni-Hoolihan <b>...</b>