Richard Stilgoe

Narrator

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Songs of Cricket

Songs of Cricket


[1] Cricket Theme Medley Various, arr. Alexander L’Estrange

[2] The Cricketers of Hambledon Bruce Blunt / Peter Warlock

[3] School Songs Medley (five school songs) Various

[4] The Summer Game – from Cricket: Hearts and Wickets)

Tim Rice / Andrew Lloyd Webber

[5] Lillian Thomson Richard Stilgoe

[6] Radnage Cricket Song (Bucks. folk song)

Traditional, collected by Horace Harman

[7] Four Jolly Bowlers The Yetties

[8] The Rules of Cricket – A Psalm Chant

The London Quartet / W.H. Havergal

[9] You’ve Got to be a Cricket Hero Al Sherman / Buddy Fields

(to Get Along with the Beautiful Girls)

Al Lewis and Fred Tupper / Cliff Nichols

[10] Jiggery Pokery Neil Hannon / Thomas Walsh

[11] Village Rondo Matthew Holst, arr. Chris Hatt

[12] Eton and Winchester R.T. Warner / F.S. Kelly

[13] I made a Hundred in the Backyard at Mum’s

Greg Champion

[14] Australian Cricket Medley Various

[15] The Barmy Army Richard Stilgoe

[16] That’s Not Cricket – from At Home Abroad

Howard Dietz / Arthur Schwartz

[17] Cricket Tea Towel: The Ins and Outs of Cricket

Anon. / The London Quartet

[18] Andy Flower Duet Richard Stilgoe / Léo Delibes

[19] Jerusalem Richard Stilgoe / C. Hubert Parry

[20] When an Old Cricketer Leaves the Crease Roy Harper


with Chris Hatt and Alexander L’Estrange (pianos), Guest Artists: Richard Stilgoe, Eliza Lumley, Rory Bremner & Tim Rice

Cantabile – The London Quartet

Featuring guest performances from the likes of Richard Stilgoe, Rory Bremner and Tim Rice, this album should prove a must-buy for cricket- and music-fans alike.

It's an eclectic tribute to the very British obsession that is cricket, bringing together works from the turn of the century (school songs from Harrow and Eton) to the present day ('Jiggery Pokery' from the Ivor Novello nominated album The Duckworth-Lewis Method) as well as from the well-known (Roy Harper’s 'When an Old Cricketer Leaves the Crease') to the obscure ('The Summer Game', from Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s little-known musical 'Cricket', commissioned for the Queen’s 60th Birthday).

Cantabile, also known as ‘The London Quartet’, have been wowing audiences across the world since the 1980s with their shows that blend performance flair, comic timing and a deep passion for high-quality vocal music.

“Brilliant moments – a droll psalm-chant recitation of the "rules" and an ingenious Pärt-style setting of a pleasingly circular explanation of the game ("Cricket Tea Towel") – show just what these singers can do.” The Independent, 5th August 2011 **

Signum - SIGCD217

(CD)

$17.50

Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days.

The Upside-down Sailor

The Upside-down Sailor


Boyle, R:

Cinderella

Words by Roahl Dahl.

Butler, M:

Dirty Beasts

Words by Roahl Dahl.

Panufnik, R:

The Upside-down Sailor

Words by Richard Stilgoe. The story of Tony Bullimore who survived freezing conditions after his boat capsized.


Richard Stilgoe (narrator)

Soundwood Ensemble, David Campbell

World premiere recordings

Black Box - BBM1089

(Sorry, download not available in your country)

William Walton - Façade

William Walton - Façade


Lambert, C:

Suite from the incidental music to Salome

Walton:

Façade

Eleanor Bron & Richard Stilgoe (reciters)


'I can’t imagine a clearer, more virtuosic account of the score’ (International Record Review)

“The Façade entertainment – poems by Edith Sitwell to music by the then-unknown William Walton – was an amorphous creation, a collection of over 40 poems and settings built up over the years between 1922 and 1928.
Pamela Hunter in her disc on the Koch Discovery label did a marvellous job collecting all the surviving settings, adding recitations of the poems for which the music had been lost. The difference is that, instead of being recited on the disc, the texts of those extra poems are printed in the booklet, with revealing comments. Also, David Lloyd-Jones has devised an order for the 34 items (including the opening fanfare) which is arguably the best yet, avoiding the anticlimactic effect of Façade 2 being separated. Eleanor Bron and Richard Stilgoe make an excellent pair of reciters, and the recording in a natural acoustic balances them well – not too close. They inflect the words more than Edith Sitwell and early interpreters did, but still keep a stylised manner, meticulously obeying the rhythms specified in the score. Not everyone will like the way Stilgoe adopts accents – Mummerset for 'Mariner Man' and 'Country Dance', Scots for 'Scotch Rhapsody', and something like southern- state American for the jazz rhythms of 'Old Sir Faulk' – but he's the most fluent Façade reciter on disc so far, with phenomenally clear articulation. Eleanor Bron is also meticulous over rhythm, in slower poems adopting a trancelike manner, which is effective and in-style.
Under David Lloyd-Jones the brilliant sextet of players from the Nash Ensemble couldn't be more idiomatic.”
Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010

Hyperion - CDA67239

(CD)

$17.50

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

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