Welcome.

Stone Records was formed in 2008 to produce high quality classical CDs with a broad appeal. In a short space of time the label has received critical acclaim for its initial releases and embarked upon a number of ambitious and successful projects. With many further discs already in the pipeline, we are looking forward to making more interesting and inspiring music in the future.

Welcome.

Stone Records was formed in 2008 to produce high quality classical CDs with a broad appeal. In a short space of time the label has received critical acclaim for its initial releases and embarked upon a number of ambitious and successful projects. With many further discs already in the pipeline, we are looking forward to making more interesting and inspiring music in the future.

Roy Agnew

Roy Agnew

Geoffrey Allen

Geoffrey Allen

Apsara

Apsara

Frederic Austin

Frederic Austin

Stephen Barlow

Stephen Barlow

Bath Philharmonia

Bath Philharmonia

Edward Batting

Edward Batting

Arnold Bax

Arnold Bax

Ludwig van Beethoven

Ludwig van Beethoven

Michael Bertram

Michael Bertram

Mary Bevan

Mary Bevan

Sophie Bevan

Sophie Bevan

Sarah-Jane Brandon

Sarah-Jane Brandon

Havergal Brian

Havergal Brian

Frank Bridge

Frank Bridge

Benjamin Britten

Benjamin Britten

George Butterworth

George Butterworth

Gavin Carr

Gavin Carr

Paul Carr

Paul Carr

Chorus Angelorum

Chorus Angelorum

Ronald Corp

Ronald Corp

David Crown

David Crown

Sophie Daneman

Sophie Daneman

William Dazeley

William Dazeley

Quirijn de Lang

Quirijn de Lang

Rebecca de Pont Davies

Rebecca de Pont Davies

Frederick Delius

Frederick Delius

John Dowland

John Dowland

Maurice Duruflé

Maurice Duruflé

George Enescu

George Enescu

Marcus Farnsworth

Marcus Farnsworth

Gerald Finzi

Gerald Finzi

Jean Françaix

Jean Françaix

Henry Balfour Gardiner

Henry Balfour Gardiner

James Gilchrist

James Gilchrist

Percy Grainger

Percy Grainger

Anna Grevelius

Anna Grevelius

Paul Guinery

Paul Guinery

George Handel

George Handel

Raymond Hanson

Raymond Hanson

Lisa Harper-Brown

Lisa Harper-Brown

Joseph Haydn

Joseph Haydn

Benjamin Hulett

Benjamin Hulett

Anna Huntley

Anna Huntley

John Ireland

John Ireland

Guy Johnston

Guy Johnston

Sholto Kynoch

Sholto Kynoch

The Lendvai String Trio

The Lendvai String Trio

Simon Lepper

Simon Lepper

Stephan Loges

Stephan Loges

The Maggini Quartet

The Maggini Quartet

Andrew Marriner

Andrew Marriner

Bohuslav Martinů

Bohuslav Martinů

Gary Matthewman

Gary Matthewman

Geraldine McGreevy

Geraldine McGreevy

Rhona McKail

Rhona McKail

Olivier Messiaen

Olivier Messiaen

Robin Milford

Robin Milford

Tristan Mitchard

Tristan Mitchard

Ernest John Moeran

Ernest John Moeran

Daniel Norman

Daniel Norman

Norman O’Neill

Norman O’Neill

C.W. Orr

C.W. Orr

Paul Paviour

Paul Paviour

The Phoenix Piano Trio

The Phoenix Piano Trio

Henry Purcell

Henry Purcell

Roger Quilter

Roger Quilter

Christine Rice

Christine Rice

Matthew Rose

Matthew Rose

Arnold Schoenberg

Arnold Schoenberg

Franz Schubert

Franz Schubert

Cyril Scott

Cyril Scott

The Choir of Somerville College

The Choir of Somerville College

Nicky Spence

Nicky Spence

Birgid Steinberger

Birgid Steinberger

Jonathan Stone

Jonathan Stone

Mark Stone

Mark Stone

Peter Warlock

Peter Warlock

David Wickham

David Wickham

Hugo Wolf

Hugo Wolf

Ralph Vaughan Williams

Ralph Vaughan Williams

Kaoru Yamada

Kaoru Yamada

Lovely review in BBC Music for Ronald Corp's latest CD - "Known mainly as a conductor of light music, Corp’s sunny String Quartet, spiky cantata, and flowing Clarinet Quintet mark him out as an engagingly colourful composer. Excellent performances."

May 16th 7:36pm • Comment

"What terrific string players we have these days, and not only in quartets!… This is one of the most attractive discs of chamber music to come my way in years"

(Fanfare magazine)

Destination Paris :: Stone Records, Independent Classical Music

stonerecords.co.uk

Stone Records was formed in 2008 to produce high quality classical CDs with a broad appeal. In a short space of time the label has received critical acclaim for its initial releases and embarked upon a number of ambitious and successful projects. With many further discs already in the pipeline, we a...

May 12th 10:18pm • No Comments

We've just had a fabulous review in US magazine Fanfare of our second ever release (February 2010) - "Fantasy" - a wonderful disc of violin and piano music, performed by Kaoru Yamada and Sholto Kynoch, with wonderful cameo appearances from singers Rhona McKail and Nicky Spence.

"For those who enjoy thematic collections, this highly appealing and deeply thoughtful one should be irresistible. Strongly recommended to everyone across the board".

This is one of my favourite discs from our catalogue.

Fantasy :: Stone Records, Independent Classical Music

stonerecords.co.uk

Stone Records was formed in 2008 to produce high quality classical CDs with a broad appeal. In a short space of time the label has received critical acclaim for its initial releases and embarked upon a number of ambitious and successful projects. With many further discs already in the pipeline, we a...

May 12th 8:32pm • No Comments

Gerald Finzi


Related Albums
 
English Love

Gerald Finzi (1901-1956) was born in London, where he spent his early. His father died when he was just seven, and following the outbreak of war Finzi moved with his mother to Harrogate, in Yorkshire. There, Finzi was able to study with the composer Ernest Farrar (until his departure for the War), and from 1917 with Edward Bairstow at York Minster. Much attracted to the beauty of the English countryside, Finzi moved in 1922 to Painswick, Gloucestershire, where he was able to compose in tranquility. His first published work was By Footpath and Stile, a song-cycle for baritone and string quartet to texts by Thomas Hardy, whose work Finzi greatly admired. Finzi and Ralph Vaughan Williams

Rural and musical isolation soon became oppressive and in 1926 Finzi moved back to London. He began studying with RO Morris, one of the outstanding British teachers of the interwar years. He also became acquainted with Ralph Vaughan Williams, whose influence he was always to acknowledge and who in 1928 conducted Finzi’s Violin Concerto. Other acquaintances in London included Holst, Bliss, Rubbra and Ferguson – who was to become a life-long friend. In 1930 Finzi gained a teaching appointment at the Royal Academy of Music, but in 1933 gave up the post after his marriage to the artist Joyce Black and moved back to the country, to Aldbourne, Wiltshire. The same year saw a complete performance of the song-cycle A Young Man’s Exhortation, his first noted success in London.

His burgeoning career was soon thwarted by the outbreak of the Second World War, causing the cancellation of the song-cycle Dies natalis at the Three Choirs Festival, a performance that could have brought him to prominence sooner. In 1939 the Finzis moved to Ashmansworth Farm, Hampshire. During the war years Finzi was drafted into the Ministry of War Transport and opened his house to a number of German and Czech refugees. He founded the Newbury String Players, initially using local amateurs, and conducted them until his death, reviving much neglected eighteenth-century string music as well as giving several premieres by his contemporaries. With the return of peace, Finzi began to receive a series of important commissions: ‘Lo, the full, final sacrifice’, a festival anthem, in 1946, a larger-scale ode For St Cecilia in 1947, a Clarinet Concerto for Frederick Thurston in 1949 (perhaps his best-known work) and, completed a year later, his masterpiece Intimations of Immortality, for tenor, chorus and orchestra.

In 1951 Finzi learned that he was suffering from Hodgkin’s Disease, a form of leukaemia, and was given between five and ten years to live. The discovery in no way lessened his activities, particularly those undertaken for other composers. He had championed Ivor Gurney in the 1930s and those efforts continued; he was also working on the music of Hubert Parry and editing the overtures of William Boyce for Musica Britannica. An all-Finzi concert in the Royal Festival Hall in 1954 at last acknowledged his standing in Britain’s musical life, and a commission from Sir John Barbirolli for the 1955 Cheltenham Festival brought forth the Cello Concerto, Finzi’s most ambitious purely instrumental work. He finally lost his fight against illness on 27 September 1956.