Alison Balsom reviews
Royal Fireworks
English Hymn Anthems (Choir of King's College, Cambridge)
There was a time when more ‘ordinary’ people attended cathedral services, and liked to hear tunes or texts they recognised when they went there. That’s one basic reason why the peculiarly English type of choral hybrid called the ‘hymn anthem’ developed in the half-century of its heyday, commencing around 1880.
Sound The Trumpet: Royal Music of Purcell & Handel
This charming disc contains some of the most imaginative and polished trumpet playing you’re ever likely to hear. Alison Balsom and Trevor Pinnock have taken music with royal associations and arranged it for trumpet and orchestra. Trumpet both introduces, and also ‘sings’, the dazzlingly virtuosic aria ending Handel’s opera Amadigi. Elsewhere, it becomes the soloist of Handel’s First Oboe Concerto (with strikingly sensitive orchestral accompaniment).
Seraph (Alison Balsom)
Unusually, James MacMillan is somewhat coy as to why his Trumpet Concerto has the title Seraph. Was he thinking of the instrument’s traditional angelic associations? Or has it more to do with dedicatee Alison Balsom’s uncanny ability to make the trumpet sing, weaving silvery-smooth long lines or pirouetting sweetly like an operatic coloratura soprano?
Alison Balsom: Italian Concertos
Despite its brilliance and distinctiveness, notably in Bach’s Second Brandenburg Concerto, the natural trumpet’s restricted notes, and therefore range of keys, severely limited its concerto repertoire in the Baroque era.