28 April 2026
Last Saturday's Northampton Symphony Orchestra concert at Spinney Theatre in Northampton was the third time we have played with the brilliant young pianist Julian Chan. Following stunning performances of the ‘Piano Concerto No 5’ by Saint-Saens (reviewed here in February 2023) and Amy Beach’s ‘Piano Concerto’ (reviewed here in July 2024), Julian joined us again on Saturday to play Rachmaninoff's 'Piano Concerto No. 3'. Julian gave a truly thrilling performance of this incredibly emotional showpiece, which received a rapturous reception from both the audience and the orchestra. It was a pleasure and privilege to accompany him. We started the concert with EspaƱa - the popular rhapsody for orchestra by Emmanuel Chabrier. After the interval we played Arnold Bax's 'Symphony No 2'. In his pre-concert talk Eric McElroy, a trustee of the Sir Arnold Bax Society, told us that there were only two performances of Bax symphonies scheduled anywhere in the world this year - a performance of the Sixth Symphony in Tokyo a few weeks ago and our performance of the Second in Northampton. Writing in The Guardian a few days before our concert, Tom Service bemoaned the continued absence of Bax from the Proms schedule, saying: "There may currently be no less fashionable music than the hyper-romantic symphonies and orchestral works of Arnold Bax. The British composer’s music featured in pretty well every Proms season throughout the 1930s and 40s and early 50s, yet he has been the rarest of visitors to the Royal Albert Hall since then. When was the last Bax symphony heard at the Proms, you ask? 2011! Far too long for a fan like me." NSO performed Bax's First Symphony two years ago (reviewed here in March 2024) but the Second Symphony (completed in 1926) is a very different work. As we started to rehearse, it seemed incredibly challenging - chromatically unpredictable and rhythmically complicated. Yet the music felt romantic rather than avant-garde. I enjoyed getting to grips with the symphony - initially as an intellectual exercise but gradually coming to appreciate the piece as a whole. Bax draws on many different musical influences: there are elements of the symphony that sound like some of his contemporaries, including Vaughan Williams, Stravinsky and the Celtic-inspired music of Granville Bantock. But Bax mixes these styles to create a consistent and satisfying whole, with all the thematic material of the symphony introduced in the first section of the opening movement. And there are some beautiful passages, particularly at the beginning of the second movement. I think our performance on Saturday went really well, making sense of what had appeared to be a challenging piece and winning many of our audience over to Bax - a tribute to the excellent work of our conductor John Gibbons. The symphony starts and ends with the same slow melancholy cor anglais fanfare, wonderfully played by Harriet Brown, providing an unresolved epilogue at the end of the final movement as the music fades to silence. The conductor Vernon Handley, who recorded all seven Bax symphonies with the BBC Philharmonic, said: "He knows he's leaving the Second Symphony for something to be said in his next symphony". I'm looking forward to discovering what resolution awaits when we tackle Bax Symphony No. 3 in a couple of years' time.