The Wind Quintet was a project Malcolm Spence undertook whilst engaging in the only formal instruction in composition he ever received at Morley College in London under Melanie Dakin; it was the work he was most proud of. For most of his short life, Malcolm was an enthusiastic French horn player who had always indulged in composition. The wind quintet was an ensemble he particularly enjoyed but for which the repertoire is limited; there being relatively few “purpose-built works. This is no dry technical exercise from a workshop but a hugely varied and crafted suite: a serious yet accessible work. The content is completely original, undeniably English in influence and, to those who knew him, unmistakably his own voice.
The piece opens with a bold march-like statement. The ideas and themes are then developed and explored before the mood changes and an achingly lyrical middle section takes off, recalling English folk melody. Eventually the irrepressible march resumes to close the first movement on a cheerful note. The second movement is a calmer, altogether more reflective piece. The tune writing is exquisite, intensely lyrical and emotional with carefully chosen harmony and voicing to set it off as it draws to a thoughtful close. The mood changes again with the third movement which is an infectiously playful work in 6/8. The oboe introduces another catchy original tune and so self-confident it is, you barely notice some of the outrageous modulations through which it passes. The movement concludes with a cheeky and swaggering jazz ending. In the last movement, the contrast is absolute. After an enigmatic start, the tempo slowly builds until the clarinet launches into the main theme, driving angular, based on a whole tone scale and in 7/8 to boot. This is challenging modern music. The instruments launch off each other as the movement continues, sometimes singly, sometimes in canon, sometimes in dissonant pairs until the piece hurtles to its unison conclusion. By this time, the easy lyricism and harmony of the first three movements seems a distant memory.
Listen to…
A short extract from I
Listen to…
A short extract from II
Listen to…
A short extract from III
Listen to…
A short extract from IV
Review
Just Flutes News Letter, January 2026
by Ian McLauchlan
The Malcolm Spence Wind Quintet really is a piece that should become part of the wind quintet standard repertoire. It is a work of four movements lasting about 22 minutes and can be played in its entirety or as four stand alone pieces. The style is very melodic with tunes that you will go away whistling. Great fun to play and a good audience pleaser at a concert!
I had the great privilege of playing in the first performance of this piece that was written by Malcolm, a good friend of mine, sadly no longer with us and have felt, along with many others that this should be published. I remember well the first play through that we had producing broad grins all round. All tunes, wonderful tunes! Malcolm was a horn player and knew the quintet repertoire well but felt that the genre was limited with many light hearted arrangements but very few ‘purpose-built’ works. He therefore set out to inject something substantial and this is it. Well written for all five instruments. I can thoroughly recommend this piece. A real crowd pleaser!
When I sent the piece to our potential publisher after a long conversation, his response was:
‘I’ve now had a chance to study the score and listen to the four movements and I agree with you that Malcolm’s piece merits, nay screams out, for publication!’
Ian McLauchlan








