The English Songbook

EMI: 5568302

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The English Songbook

Label:

EMI

Catalogue No:

5568302

Discs:

1

Barcode:

0724355683021

Medium:

CD
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The English Songbook


anon.:

The Death of Queen Jane

Britten:

Down by the Salley Gardens

Browne, W D:

To Gratiana dancing and singing

Delius:

Twilight Fancies

Dunhill:

The Cloths of Heaven, Op. 30/3

Finzi:

The dance continued

Since we loved

German:

Orpheus with his lute

Grainger:

Bold William Taylor

Brigg Fair

Gurney:

Sleep

I will go with my father a-ploughing

Parry:

No longer mourn for me

Quilter:

Come away, death

Now sleeps the crimson petal, Op. 3 No. 2 (Tennyson)

Somervell:

To Lucasta, on Going to the Wars

Stanford:

La Belle Dame sans merci (John Keats) (1877)

My love's an arbutus (Old Irish air)

trad.:

The Turtle Dove

Vaughan Williams:

Linden Lea

Silent Noon

Warlock:

Jillian of Berry

Cradle Song

Rest, sweet nymphs


Ian Bostridge (tenor), Julius Drake (piano)

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playStanford: La Belle Dame Sans Merci

playGurney: 5 Elizabethan Songs - Sleep

playGurney: I Will Go With My Father A-Ploughing

playDunhill: The Cloths Of Heaven, Op. 30/3

playBrowne: To Gratiana Dancing & Singing

playSomervell: To Lucasta, On Going To The Wars

playDelius: 7 Songs From The Norwegian - Twilight Fancies

playGerman: Henry VIII - Orpheus With His Lute

playWarlock: Jilian Of Berry

playWarlock: Cradle Song

playFinzi: A Young Man's Exhortation, Op. 14 - The Dance Continued

playVaughan Williams: Linden Lea

playVaughan Williams: Silent Noon

playStanford: 50 Songs Of Old Ireland - My Love's An Arbutus

playAnon: The Death Of Queen Jane

playParry: English Lyrics, Op. 176 - No Longer Mourn For Me

playFinzi: Since We Loved

playBritten: The Salley Gardens

playWarlock: Rest, Sweet Nymphs

playQuilter: 3 Shakespeare Songs, Op. 6 - Come Away, Death

playQuilter: Now Sleeps The Crimson Petal, Op. 3/2

playGrainger: Bold William Taylor

playGrainger: Brigg Fair

playTrad: The Little Turtle Dove

Gramophone Classical Music Guide

2010

“The recital begins with Keats and ends with Shakespeare: that can't be bad. But it also begins with Stanford and ends with Parry; what would the modernists of their time have thought about that? They would probably not have believed that those two pillars of the old musical establishment would still be standing by in 1999. And in fact how well very nearly all these composers stand! Quilter's mild drawing–room manners might have been expected to doom him, but the three songs here – the affectionate, easy grace of his Tennyson setting, the restrained passion of his 'Come away, death' and the infectious zest of 'I will go with my father a–ploughing' – endear him afresh and demonstrate once again the wisdom of artists who recognise their own small area of 'personal truth' and refuse to betray it in exchange for a more fashionable 'originality'.
Likewise Finzi, whose feeling for Hardy's poems is so modestly affirmed in 'The dance continued'.
Does that song, incidentally, make deliberate reference, at 'those songs we sang when we went gipsying', to Jillian of Berry by Warlock (whose originality speaks for itself)? Jillian of Berry itself perhaps calls for more full–bodied, less refined tones than Bostridge's. One could do with a ruddier glow and more rotund fruitiness in the voice. Yet for most of the programme he isn't merely a well–suited singer but an artist who brings complete responsiveness to words and music. The haunted desolation of Delius's Twilight Fancies is perfectly caught in the pale hue of the voice which can nevertheless give body and intensity to the frank cry of desire, calming then to pianissimo for the last phrase amid the dim echoes of hunting horns in the piano part. Julius Drake plays with strength of imagination and technical control to match Bostridge's own.”

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