Richard Blackford describes Blewbury Air as a love-song to the village of Blewbury in Oxfordshire, which is where Blackford lives. Lasting around 12 minutes, the three movement work is explicitly descriptive and each movement has an evocative title, 'By the water's edge', 'Incantation with bells', and 'The wind in the branches', and they reflect Blackford's intention to depict the lake near his house which teems with wildlife.
The first movement starts of vividly passionate, with a strong cello melody giving plenty of scope for Wallfisch's singing tone. Later the movement dies away but keeps the cello in focus. In form, it is a rondo, but Blackford transforms his material thus holding the interest. The second movement starts with a striking moment for solo cello, before the piano comes in with the evocative bells of the title. Blackford alternates these two, rhapsodic cello and bell-like piano, developing them and making them interact and creating quite a stir before evocative calm is restored at the end. The short finale is fast and not a little furious,
We caught the London premiere of Richard Blackford's Pieta in October 2019 [see my review]. Blackford is an interesting composer. Born in 1954 he is one of a generation who trained in modernism (Blackford was, for a period, assistant to Hans Werner Henze) but turned their back on it and moved into other areas, and whose more traditional compositional voice has emerged more slowly. Blackford has a significant catalogue of film, TV and theatre work, but more recently has concentrated on concert music, creating a distinctive voice with remarkable success.
This new piece is tonal, yet full of interest and finely constructive. Its length makes it a prime candidate for recitals.
Richard Blackford (born 1954) - Blewbury Air
Raphael Wallfisch (cello)
Adrian Farmer (piano)
Recorded at Wyastone Studios, 5 June 2020
NIMBUS ALLIANCE NI 1570 1CD [12:06]
The recording is available direct from Nimbus, and the printed music is also available for purchase from Nimbus Music Publishing.
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