The Film Music of Sir Malcolm Arnold, Vol. 1
London Symphony Orchestra
Richard Hickox
New cover
Recorded In:
St Jude on the Hill, Hampstead, London
This prize-winning recording of Arnold’s classic film scores is now available as part of the Chandos Movies series.
The suites on this disc remain the premiere recordings of these works arranged by Christopher Palmer
The initial release of this disc was extremely well received and was credited with a three-star Penguin Guide Award.
This disc was the first collection of Arnold’s film music ever to be issued.
It includes Arnold’s first important film score, The Sound Barrier, and award-winning scores such as The Bridge on the River Kwai, winner of an Oscar and best known for its use of the ‘Colonel Bogey’ march, and The Inn of the Sixth Happiness for which Arnold won the Ivor Novello award.
This recording was given a stamp of approval from Sir Malcolm Arnold who was present at all the recording sessions,
Sir Malcolm Arnold started composing for films in 1947 and stopped over 23 years later with more than 100 scores for features and documentaries to his credit, not to mention incidental music. During this period he also produced most of his non-film music, music for all genres and age groups. Arnold writes at high speed with very few preliminary sketches, having worked everything out in his mind beforehand; he rarely makes changes and prefers composing new works to recycling old ones.
Arnold claims he went into film music because he loved films and because it enabled him to practice not only composing (and earn a good living from it) but also conducting. He describes film work as, ‘an immensely liberating experience, an invaluable asset to professionalism’ and says that he always writes the kind of music he wants to hear as the member of an audience. His success in the medium is easy to understand: he works quickly and well; his music always has a strong dramatic undercurrent; he has a vivid sense of orchestral colour and effect; his melodic invention is second to no-one’s in post-war Britain; and his music in the cinema makes the kind of immediate impact that film music must make. A film composer, in fact, not only has to be right first time round, he also has to communicate first time round.
Arnold is not afraid to be obvious, nor does he avoid clichés and mannerisms if they work. He acknowledges debts to William Alwyn and Sir William Walton, but above all to Berlioz, one of his greatest musical enthusiasms – ‘If a film-score comes out uninfluenced by Berlioz, it’s no damn good!’
Reviews
‘Richard Hickox conducts the LSO with splendid panache, and the playing is heartfelt. The Chandos engineers have responded with recording of spectacular range and colour… There are not many discs of a composer’s film-music as varied or as richly enjoyabl
Gramophone
'This splendid CD is as much a tribute to the skills of the late Christopher Palmer who created the suites for this recording as it is to the performers and engineers and the ever-imaginative Arnold.'
Gramophone
‘All this music is superbly played by Hickox and the LSO… and the recording is as lavish as anyone could wish – very much in the Chandos demonstration bracket.’
The Penguin Complete Guide
‘Richard Hickox and the London Symphony Orchestra obviously relish these colourful and contrasting suites… Highly recommended.’
Classic CD


12 comments:
But many thanks for all your fantastic efforts to raise our music awareness
Soy un permanente seguidor de su excelente blog de música clásica. Ruego resubir este archivo, por cuanto el link no funciona. Gracias.
Hola estimado amigo Xanturios. Agradezco muy de veras su nuevo link, que me ha permitido descargar esta joya musical. Su siempre seguidor.
Thank you very much
:)
Reupload woud be nice, thank you.
Hello Xanturios. Could you re up this album please ? And maybe create a new post for the 13cd from DECCA with every classical musics of Malcolm Arnold ? (if you have it. I saw it on Diabolus in Musica but it's dead there)
New link:
https://nitroflare.com/view/A143AF284B931C7/MArnoldFilmMusVol1.rar
About the DECCA 13 CDs "The MalcolmArnold Edition", I don't have it, you can download it from ruTracker (Torrent site).
Thank you so much. And I'll look for it on RuTracker. Actually I found a Torrent but there's no seed. Too rare and unknown. Thanks for your blog
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