The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Julia Sitkovetsk­y and Christophe­r Glynn CLASSICAL

- David Mellor

Where Corals Lie

Chandos, out now ★★★★★

This excellent album, vividly recorded in May at the Yehudi Menuhin School, sheds welcome light on a little known part of Elgar’s output: his songs. Elgar published more than 70, of which only the Sea Pictures (1899) are reasonably well known, and then only in the orchestral version, not Elgar’s own piano accompanim­ent recorded here. The Sea Pictures were premiered by the Valkyrie-like mezzo

Clara (later Dame Clara) Butt to great acclaim at the Norfolk and Norwich Festival. Elgar, in the immediate aftermath of his belated triumphant breakthrou­gh with the Enigma Variations, composed some memorable tunes here, and the piano accompanim­ents exude huge confidence. It’s an entertaini­ng piece, even if the poetry isn’t up to much.

The British soprano Julia Sitkovetsk­y (right), daughter of the celebrated violinist Dmitry, sounds radiant throughout, and is splendidly accompanie­d by the pianist Christophe­r Glynn.

They are a persuasive partnershi­p in a recital that presents a lot of interestin­g material spanning four decades, from The Self Banished (1875), composed when Elgar, a slow starter, was in his teens, to

When The Spring Comes Round (1915), a sombre wartime piece.

Among the most memorable tracks here are a publisher-commission­ed arrangemen­t of Salut D’Amour called Pansies (Elgar, sadly for him, sold the rights on publicatio­n of this glorious melody, and the publisher cleaned up for years); In Moonlight, a delightful setting of the ‘popular song’ sequence from Elgar’s Richard Strauss-like symphonic poem In The South (1904); and, best of all, the ardent Pleading, a terrific song from the composer at the height of his fame (1908).

Elgar loved words, but had poor literary taste. Much of the poetry he sets is unworthy of his genius, notably some of his wife Caroline Alice’s verse. Elgar himself chips in with two verse adaptation­s of Eastern European folk songs: The Torch and The River (1909) hiding behind the pen-name ‘Pietro d’Alba’ (Peter White, his daughter’s pet rabbit!). An album sympatheti­c to this under-appreciate­d aspect of Elgar’s genius, which I confidentl­y predict you will find a real treat.

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