The Symphonic World of Arnold Bax
What’s Inside the Box

BAX, A.: Symphony No. 1 / In the Faery Hills / Garden of Fand
BAX, A.: Symphony No. 2 / November Woods
BAX, A.: Symphony No. 3 / The Happy Forest
BAX, A.: Symphony No. 4 / Nympholept
BAX, A.: Symphony No. 5 / The Tale the Pine-Trees Knew
BAX, A.: Symphony No. 6 / Into the Twilight
BAX, A.: Symphony No. 7 / Tintagel
8.553525 • Disc 1

Symphony No. 1 in E flat
In the Faery Hills • The Garden of Fand

Arnold Bax related naturally to Ireland and Celtic folklore, its aspirations, mythology and history firing both a musical and literary vision. Symphony No. 1 in E flat, written in 1921–22, may be heard as a reaction to the tragedy of Ireland and the frustrated idealism and sacrifice of the Easter Rising of 1916. The tone-poem In the Faery Hills, inspired by a poem by W.B. Yeats, was written in 1909, later forming the centre of a trilogy of tone-poems under the general title Eire. The evocative The Garden of Fand – which was revealed by Bax to be a representation of the sea – was completed in 1916, described by the composer as the last of his Irish works.


‘In the two symphonic poems, more specifically inspired by Irish themes, Lloyd-Jones draws equally warm and sympathetic performances from the Scottish Orchestra, bringing inner clarity to the heaviest scoring. First-rate sound…’
Penguin Guide