This musician's Violin Concerto (1965) appears on a reissue CD of Yehudi Menuhin's versions of Lennox Berkeley's and Andrzej Panufnik's violin concerti (EMI CDM 5 66121 2). I've omitted mentioning the 'Sir' and 'Lord' preceding all these names ...but Williamson's. As far as I know, fame is something else he does not share with them either, to say nothing of a half-decent discography. My internet search has only produced a Piano Concerto #2, a gratifying discovery that confirms my liking of this Australian-born musician, and even leads me to reconsider: maybe the piano is his instrument. The violin concerto is rather oddly shaped, with two slow outer movements embracing a central scherzo. The closing adagio molto peters out curiously in a pensive, even intense solo. There is joy, even playfulness in this concerto, but on the whole it's reflective, even sad. The piano concerto, from 1960, is spirited and melodically rich, and fun seems to me to be its keynote (parodying his own works from around that same time, according to MW himself -- say the liner notes). This is approachable music that isn't lightweight, and it's full of intriguing passages that require interpreters with technical proficiency and plenty of feeling. I would have thought he'd be better known, and am puzzled by his poor representation on CDs -- although the booklet to the piano concerto mentions a "large output of symphonies, chamber music, operas and oratorios... [and] no fewer than four piano concertos to date." Born in Sydney in 1931, he became Master of the Queen's Music in 1975, and has been awarded a CBE and other honours. Can anyone fill me in about this composer? Thanks in advance. Bert Bailey, in Ottawa