Hp's listing of Lyrita records on his TAS Superdisc List was a revelation to me. In addition to wonderful sound, engineered and produced by the Decca greats (Wilkie, Dunkerley, Goodall, Harvey, Woolcock, Walker, etc) the label introduced to me the world of modern composers from the British Isles in addition to the big three, Elgar, Holst and Vaughan Williams.
There are only 100 records in their entire vinyl stereo catalogue, so it was pretty easy to collect them all. I started collecting Lyritas in the mid 80's and bought most of them new, either in London or when a couple of importers began bringing them into the US. They were all Nimbus pressings. I then bought all the Decca pressings (which were the first pressings) all used from British record shops and have a complete collection of those (all Lyritas up to 110 and 112,114,118,119.) They were the Lyritas that were released earlier than 1980 when Decca was sold to Polygram and moved their pressings to Holland. Richard Itter, the owner and founder of Lyrita, didn't like the quality of the Holland pressings and switched to Nimbus for the mastering and pressing of the records. He kept the Decca team to produce and engineer the records.
The Finzi recording Lyrita SRCS92 referred by the OP is not on the TAS SuperDisc list. However it well could have been reviewed in TAS, since they did reviews of quite a few Lyritas that didn't end up as SuperDiscs.
Here is a list of the Lyrita records which have appeared on the TAS list. The first notation is the last TAS issue they appeared (#TAS meant they were on the TAS website in 2005, when I did the list). The last listings are what pressings I have (Decca is the first, Nimbus is second, except for the highest numbers which were pressed after Decca moved their pressings to Holland and Lyrita switched to Nimbus, Lyrita is third - probably mastered by some other company and pressed by Nimbus). Musical Heritage Society issued remastered versions of some of the earlier Lyritas - they are generally much cheaper and easier to find. The Bax Sym 6 is listed in the TAS Super Disc in its MHS pressing. Not sure why, perhaps HP didn't have the original Lyrita pressing. The @ sign refers to the best of the best from the TAS Superdiscs.
#tas Lyrita SRCS033 Bliss Music for Strings Rignold (Decca, Nimbus) (MHS1251)
#7 Lyrita SRCS034 Holst Brook Green Suite Imogen Holst (Decca) (MHS1303)
#tas MHS 1198 Bax Sym 6 Del Mar (orig Lyrita SRCS35 Decca)
#73 Lyrita SRCS046 Still,R. Sym 3-4 Fredman/Goosens (Decca) (MHS 1482)
#tas Lyrita SRCS075 Finzi Intimations of Immortality Handley (Decca) (MHS3598)
#44 Lyrita SRCS079 Williamson Organ Con Williamson/Boult (Decca, Nimbus)
#tas Lyrita SRCS101 Rawsthorne PCon 1 Binns (Decca, Nimbus)
#tas @Lyrita SRCS109 Arnold Dances: English/Scottish 1-8 Arnold (Decca, Nimbus)
One of my all time favorite records, this is the most expensive of the Lyritas. The Nimbus pressing is wonderful, but the Decca is superior. Unfortunately there was a very late EMI pressing released near the end of the vinyl era for Lyrita which is distinctly inferior. My friend John Dunkerley engineered this recording.
#tas @Lyrita SRCS116 Maconchy Sym for Double String Orch Handley (Lyrita)
#tas Lyrita SRCS124 Lloyd Sym 5 Downes (Nimbus)
#50 Lyrita SRCS125 Vaughan Williams Sons of Light Willcocks (Lyrita)
#tas Lyrita SRCS126 Leigh Harpsichord Concertino Pinnock (Nimbus)
Larry