Ex. VAT prices will be applied automatically for non-EU delivery addresses. See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Britten Abroad
Susan Gritton (soprano), Mark Padmore (tenor) & Iain Burnside (piano) Britten's settings of Italian, Russian, French and German, performed here by Susan Gritton, Mark Padmore and
Iain Burnside are certainly amongst the most distinctive and very finest examples of his art, each fashioned
specifically for a much-loved and favoured artist.
The Seven Sonnets of Michelangelo were completed in America in October 1940 and were the first songs
written specifically for Britten's life-long partner and principle interpreter, the tenor Peter Pears, to whom
they are dedicated and unquestionably addressed. Britten and Pears premiered the Michelangelo Sonnets at the
Wigmore Hall on 23 September 1942, the first of many memorable appearances they were to make in
London's premiere recital hall over the next three decades.
The Poet's Echo was written during a holiday that Britten and Pears spent in the Soviet Union with Galina
Vishnevskaya and Mstislav Rostropovich in August 1965.The cycle is dedicated to 'Galya and Slava' and was
first performed by the dedicatees in the Small Hall of the Moscow Conservatoire, on 2 December 1965; they
gave the UK premiere on 2 July the following year, in London's Royal Festival Hall.
Um Mitternacht was written around 1960. It was first performed by the soprano Lucy Shelton and pianist Ian
Brown at the 1992 Aldeburgh Festival and only entered the repertory with the publication of The Red
Cockatoo & Other Songs by Faber Music in 1994. It is unique in that it's Britten's only setting of Goethe, an
anthology of whose verse he received around this time from his friend Prince Ludwig of Hesse and the Rhine,
the dedicatee of the final song-cycle on the present disc, the Sechs Hölderlin-Fragmente. Britten and Pears
recorded them for the BBC Third programme on 20 October 1958. “With the ever-inventive Iain Burnside at the piano, revelling in Britten's keyboard felicities, the vocal honours are shared evenly by soprano and tenor. Mark Padmore is commanding in the Italianate, almost bel canto style of the Michelangelo sonnets, and Susan Gritton's rich-hued timbre and linguistic mastery reap rewards in the Russian and German cycles.” The Telegraph, 17th May 2008 | 
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Susan Gritton (soprano), Pamela Helen Stephen (mezzo-soprano), Mark Padmore (tenor), James Gilchrist (tenor) & Matthew Rose (bass) Collegium Musicum 90, Richard Hickox Schubert’s final mass and most ambitious setting was composed during the summer of 1828, only months
before his death. It was premiered posthumously, on October 4, 1829, under the direction of his brother,
Ferdinand. Much more than his previous efforts in the genre, it is a choral mass, relegating the vocal
soloists to three brief episodes to allow for large chorus passages, and provides an extremely active role
for the orchestra. Today, the Mass in E Flat is increasingly acknowledged as an individual masterpiece;
powerful and disquieting, more monumental than the fifth, but likewise seeking to reconcile liturgical
grandeur with Schubert’s own subjective romantic feeling, whilst still influenced by Haydn, Beethoven
and Bach. Its concern for splendour is most obvious in the huge set-piece fugues at the end of the Gloria
and Credo but all the time liturgical tradition is coloured by an individual and sometimes unsettling
chromaticism, possibly evoking the personal pain he was suffering, not only physically but also the
anguish of questioning his faith. The result is some of the most violent anguish encountered in a setting
of the text. The recording is dedicated to the memory of Francesca McManus, the manager of CM90 who sadly died
at the end of November. | 
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| |  | Poulenc - Gloria and Motets
Susan Gritton Polyphony, Britten Sinfonia, The Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge, Stephen Layton Stephen Layton and Polyphony continue to blaze a trail as great interpreters and dazzling performers of a wide range of choral music. Their recent disc of Bruckner’s Mass in E minor and motets was acclaimed as a benchmark recording. For their latest Hyperion disc they turn to some of the most bewitching and unusual, yet well-loved, choral works of the twentieth century.
Poulenc’s choral music is a deep expression both of his faith and of his unique musical language. In the various motets, the music responds to the composer’s studies of Bach, Monteverdi, Palestrina and Gabrieli, but is always stylistically progressive. Prominently featured are Poulenc’s distinctive and often ingenious chord progressions. Each motet has its own delightfully etched personality.
Poulenc’s Gloria is one of his most enduringly appealing works. In some ways straightforwardly pious, it is also tinged with mischievous irreverence and a sense of rollocking enjoyment. ‘When I wrote this piece’, Poulenc famously recalled, ‘I had in mind those frescoes by Gozzoli where the angels stick out their tongues; and also some serious Benedictine monks I had once seen revelling in a game of football.’ This recording by the Britten Sinfonia, The Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge, Polyphony and the soprano soloist Susan Gritton under Stephen Layton brings out all these aspects in a classic performance. “Gloriously pompous,” says Marc Rochester of the fanfare that opens Poulenc’s Gloria. He’s quite right, of course, but also right in pointing out that it is absolutely electric. And that goes for much of this terrific album. When the massed forces of Polyphony, the Britten Sinfonia and the Trinity College Choir ring out at full strength, the sound is simply incredible. Gramophone Magazine | 
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Susan Gritton, Sara Mingardo, Mark Padmore & Alastair Miles Tenebrae Choir, London Symphony Orchestra, Sir Colin Davis For a limited period all copies of the 2SACD set will include a
bonus DVD featuring highlights from the performances and
an interview with Sir Colin Davis. English only (no subtitles).
A co-production by the BBC and LSO. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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Susan Gritton (soprano) Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Yuri Simonov | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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Susan Gritton (soprano) & Gerald Finley (baritone) London Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, Richard Hickox live recording "Gritton’s fearless and star-bright soprano waved the flags of the nations, and with [Geralrd] Finley, finally hoisted
the anchor to set free the voyaging soul." Hilary Finch, The Times, 06 June 2006 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Haydn - The Complete Mass Edition
Haydn: | Mass, Hob. XXII: 4 in E flat major 'Große Orgelmesse' Mass, Hob. XXII: 8 in C major - Missa Cellensis 'Mariazellermesse' Mass, Hob. XXII:10 in B flat major 'Heiligmesse' Mass, Hob. XXII: 6 in G major 'Nicolaimesse' Mass, Hob. XXII:12 in B flat major 'Theresienmesse' Mass, Hob. XXII: 7 in B flat major 'Kleine Orgelmesse' Mass, Hob. XXII:11 in D minor 'Nelsonmesse' Ave Regina (Hob. XXIIIb:3) Mass, Hob. XXII: 1 in F major 'Missa brevis' Te Deum, Hob. XXIIIc:1 Mass, Hob. XXII: 9 in C major 'Paukenmesse' Incidental music to 'Alfred, König der Angelsachsen' Te Deum, Hob. XXIIIc:2 Mass, Hob. XXII:14 in B flat major 'Harmoniemesse' Mass, Hob. XXII:13 in B flat major Schöpfungmesse' Mass, Hob. XXII: 3 in G major 'Missa rorate coeli desuper' Mass, Hob. XXII: 5 in C major 'Cäcilienmesse' Mass, Hob. XXII: 2 'Missa sunt bona mixta malis' Schöpfungsmesse - alternative Gloria for Marie Therese Te Deum, Hob. XXIIIc:1 Mass, Hob. XXII: 7 in B flat major 'Kleine Orgelmesse' |
Janice Watson, Susan Gritton, Nancy Agenta, Lorna Anderson, Pamela Helen Stephen, Catherine Denley, Louise Winter, Mark Padmore & Stephen Varcoe Collegium Musicum 90, Richard Hickox Period instrument performances | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Edward Elgar - The Spirit of England
Susan Gritton (soprano), Andrew Kennedy (tenor) BBC Symphony Orchestra, BBC Symphony Chorus, David Lloyd-Jones World Premiere recordings | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | (comic opera in three acts)Libretto by Karel Sabina, English version by Kit Hesketh-Harvey
Susan Gritton (Ma¡renka), Yvette Bonner (Esmeralda), Yvonne Howard (Ludmila), Diana Montague (Háta), Paul Charles Clarke (Jeník), Robin Leggate (Ringmaster), Timothy Robinson (Va¡sek), Neal Davies (Kru¡sina), Geoffrey Moses (Mícha), Peter Rose (Kecal) & Kit Hesketh-Harvey (Indian) Philharmonia Orchestra & The Royal Opera Chorus, Sir Charles Mackerras | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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Magdalena Kozena & Susan Gritton Gabrielli Consort & Players, Paul McCreesh | | DG Archiv - 4775415 (CD - 2 discs) Normally: £25.99 (£22.12 ex. VAT) Special: £16.89 (£14.37 ex. VAT) |
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