The appearance in 2017 of the first volume of the music of David Hackbridge Johnson on Toccata Classics took many by surprise, not only because he has written a vast body of work in relative secrecy since his childhood, but also because the quality of his music is nothing short of extraordinary for a nearly unknown output. Paul Mann leads the Royal Scottish National Orchestra for this second volume, continuing the revelations of Johnson's long-hidden art, and the listener may notice Johnson's many influences, which include ...
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The appearance in 2017 of the first volume of the music of David Hackbridge Johnson on Toccata Classics took many by surprise, not only because he has written a vast body of work in relative secrecy since his childhood, but also because the quality of his music is nothing short of extraordinary for a nearly unknown output. Paul Mann leads the Royal Scottish National Orchestra for this second volume, continuing the revelations of Johnson's long-hidden art, and the listener may notice Johnson's many influences, which include Mahler, Nielsen, Sibelius, Shostakovich, and especially Vaughan Williams, to name just a few symphonists whose ideas resonate in the Symphony No. 10, Op. 312, No. 1 and the Symphony No. 13, Op. 361, No. 1. Johnson doesn't slavishly imitate anyone, but he has internalized the music of his predecessors and personalized the rhetorical style and formal organization of the modern symphony to suit his expansive vision. Somewhat more idiosyncratic are Johnson's shorter orchestral motets and...
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