Press/Reviews

Gramophone review of Eric Parkin's Priory Records release

'This is a very important issue indeed. The name William Baines may he unfamiliar to many readers but I would certainly place him among the major figures in English piano music in the early part of this century. The output he produced during his tragically short life -he succumbed to incipient tuberculosis at the age of 23 in 1922 -is truly phenomenal. Not only did he compose a remarkable amount of very fine and highly original piano music, but he also produced a Symphony, a concerto,ie work for piano and orchestra (yet to be heard), a tone-poem entitled The Island of the Fay after an Edgar Allan Poe poem. as well as a dozen or so songs. To my knowledge this is only the second commercial recording ever made of his music (Eric Parkin also recorded a volume of piano music for Lyrita back in the 1970s, 5/72 nla) so Priory are to be greatly applauded for their vision and enterprise in releasing this long overdue tribute.

One of the remarkable things about Baines is the rapidity with which he seemed to find a unique voice. He fell under the spell of Scriabin and Cyril Scott early on in his musical development - in fact he was one of the few composers to fully personalize Scriabin's harmonic sound world but one need only sample, say, the evocative seascape 'Goodnight to Flamboro' from Tides or the shimmering Pool-Lights to realize just how fast Baines assimilated these influences into his own personal voice. There is great consistency of quality in Baines's piano music too, perhaps because he was such a fine pianist as well.

All of the pieces presented on this disc are delightful, but I would single out the beautiful Paradise Gardens (which at times recalls the music of John Ireland), Tides, Twilight Pieces and the Seven Preludes of 1919 as representing Baines at his most inspired.

Eric Parkin, who of course is no stranger to this music (having presented a good deal of Baines's piano music on radio as well as the earlier Lyrita disc), plays beautifully and with conviction, and the recorded sound is good, if a little hard-edged in some of the more forceful passages. If you have the slightest interest in English music I urge you to explore this very rewarding disc which I hope will encourage other record companies to take up the cause.'

Gramophone, September 1997

Records & Recording review of Eric Parkin's Lyrita release

'The music is always beautifully laid out for keyboard, harmonically rich but never oppressive, and the rhythmic content subtly flowing. A disc well worth investigating; it is high time that we heard some of these pieces at recitals, for they deserve, and reward, frequent hearing.'

Records & Recording (John McCabe), May 1972

The Musical Times review of Baines concert in Leeds City Museum, 1956

'His piano works are poetic miniatures, often difficult though imaginatively laid out for the keyboard… The composer is said to have been influenced by Scriabin; but he had an obviously original viewpoint, a keen ear for tonality and a certain flair for the invention of short, pregnant motives.'

The Musical Times (Ernest Bradbury), June 1956