Nicholas Jones’s chapter in this book, ‘The Sound of Raasay: Birtwistle’s Hebridean Experience’, reproduces a photograph of Birtwistle’s ‘former cottage and composer-studio’ on the Isle of Raasay (p. 179). The cottage is of basic design, with the composer’s octagonal studio placed alongside. In front of the buildings is the Sound of Raasay, and beyond that, dominating everything, are the fiercely sharp-edged, snow-capped Cuillin hills (the photograph was taken in February 2014) under a sky that, if not quite louring (there’s a bit of sunshine) is clearly working up to it. Jones doesn’t discuss the image, but it is tempting to say that it tells you everything you need to know about Birtwistle’s music: it instantly conjures the elemental and melancholic qualities that have long been seen as central to his voice, while the mirroring of natural and man-made shapes—the triangles of the mountains and the cottage’s gable—as well as the structure of the octagonal studio, resonate with his apparently geometrical attitude towards his material and its working-out. Of course, Birtwistle’s music is more varied than a single image can suggest, but it is very far from what might be implied by his 1989–94 work Three Settings of Celan being played at the Darmstadt Festival under the heading of ‘new eclecticism’, as reported in Mark Delaere’s chapter, ‘Gigue Machine and other Gigs: Birtwistle in Europe and Beyond’ (p. 286). Birtwistle mines a relatively narrow seam, however rich, and there is a monolithic aspect across his output, with none of the overt changes of style, technique, or manner found in his fellow so-called Manchester School colleagues, Alexander Goehr and Peter Maxwell Davies. This monolithic aspect is reflected in Birtwistle scholarship: it is striking that the analytically based chapters in this book are very similar in approach, and that by far the majority of the volume draws on the close study of scores. Only Jones’s discussion of the influence of landscape and place, Tom Hall’s tracing of the relationship between Birtwistle and Peter Zinovieff, and Delaere’s discussion of Birtwistle performances in Europe veer from the path, and even then half of Delaere’s chapter is analytical and both Jones’s and Hall’s have substantial analytical passages too.