Before
Vernon Handley and
Bryden Thomson's digital cycles of the complete symphonies of
Arnold Bax, there were only single symphonies in scattered stereo releases. Arguably the best of these were issued by Lyrita, and arguably the best of those are coupled on this reissue: a 1970 Second Symphony with
Myer Fredman conducting the
London Philharmonic and a 1971 Fifth with
Raymond Leppard leading the same orchestra. This argument rests partly on the quality of the pieces. All
Bax's symphonies have heroic themes scored in brazen colors, but his 1926 Second has the most cogently reasoned developments and his 1932 Fifth has the most powerful rhetoric plus the most emotionally satisfying Epilogue. But in the end it's the quality of the performances that make the case for the music. A student of
Adrian Boult and an assistant to
Otto Klemperer,
Fredman brings a strong technique and a firm sense of pacing to the Second's epic narrative arch.
Leppard later did excellent work with the
English Chamber Orchestra, but his youthful recordings in the British orchestral repertoire were especially heartfelt, and his Fifth is both tightly controlled and lyrically affecting, particularly in the Epilogue. The
London Philharmonic plays with skill and professionalism, but with perhaps more dedication than it brought to its contemporary recordings of
Brahms and
Beethoven. Recorded in the Walthamstow Assembly Hall in London, Lyrita's stereo sound is big, clear, and deep, with a tangible sense of time and place.