Howells: The Little Boy Lost

This page lists our only recording of The Little Boy Lost, by Herbert Norman Howells (1892-1983) on CD.

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Down by the Salley Gardens

Catalogue No:

HMC902093

Discs:

1

Release date:

5th Sept 2011

Barcode:

3149020209325

Medium:

CD
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Down by the Salley Gardens

Works by Vaughan Williams, Finzi, Howells & Quilter


Berkeley, L:

The Horseman

Finzi:

Since we loved

The sigh

At Middle-Field Gate in February (from I Said to Love)

Gurney:

Down by the Salley Gardens

Hely-Hutchinson:

et in the manner of Händel

Howells:

King David

The Widow Bird

The Little Boy Lost

Purcell:

Music for a while, Z583

arr. Tippett

Lord, what is man?, Z192

arr. Britten

Let the night perish (Job's Curse), Z191

arr. Britten

Quilter:

It was a lover and his lass

Three Shakespeare Songs, Op. 6

Hey, ho, the wind and the rain (No. 5 from Five Shakespeare Songs, Op. 23)

Take, O take those lips away

Stanford:

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

Vaughan Williams:

Linden Lea

Bright is the Ring of Words (No. 8 from Songs of Travel)

Warlock:

Jillian of Berry


Bejun Mehta (countertenor) & Julius Drake (piano)

CD

$17.75

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

This programme offers a vivid and varied cross-section of English song, ranging from the Edwardian aesthetic of Quilter and early Vaughan Williams to the intensely expressive style of Howells and Finzi. The Purcell realisations by Britten and Tippett, meanwhile, are products of two great 20th-century composers engaging with their musical heritage. In all these different styles, Bejun Mehta shows the same verbal and vocal mastery that won such acclaim for his debut Handel recital on harmonia mundi.

playHerbert Howells: King David

playRoger Quilter: It was a lover and his lass

playIvor Gurney: Down by the salley gardens

playRalph Vaughan Williams: Silent Noon

playHenry Purcell: Lord, what is man?

playHenry Purcell: Job's Curse

playRalph Vaughan Williams: Linden Lea

playRoger Quilter: Come away, death

playRoger Quilter: O mistress mine

playRoger Quilter: Blow, blow, thou winter wind

playGerald Finzi: At Middle-Field Gate in February

playHerbert Howells: The Widow Bird

playLennox Berkeley: The Horseman

playHerbert Howells: The Little Boy Lost

playCharles Villiers Stanford: La Belle Dame Sans Merci

playRalph Vaughan Williams: Bright is the ring of words

playGerald Finzi: The Sigh

playPeter Warlock: Jillian of Berry

playVictor Hely-Hutchinson: Set in the manner of Handel

playRoger Quilter: Take, o take those lips away

playGerald Finzi: Since we loved

playRoger Quilter: Hey, ho, the wind and the rain

playHenry Purcell: Music for a while

The Guardian

1st September 2011

****

“Bejun Mehta certainly can't be faulted on his eclecticism in his whistle-stop tour of English song...Mehta's singing is so heart-stoppingly beautiful and musically perceptive that you wish he had recorded whole cycles rather than just representative songs.”

The Observer

11th September 2011

“Mehta's gift for mood and atmosphere is heard in the light beauty of Quilter's "It was a lover and his lass", the sweet melancholy of Gurney's "Down by the Salley Gardens" or the veiled mystery of Lennox Berkeley's "The Horseman". Pianist Julius Drake provides customary alert, expressive accompaniment.”

BBC Music Magazine

November 2011

*****

“Mehta is a technically excellent singer; with a firm well-supported line; an unusually resonant lower range; and fine expressive diction, well equal to Julius Drake's sturdy accompaniment. And he's hardly more bloodless than genteel English tenors of the era...he exploits his thinner tone deftly for unusual, even eerie effects, especially in Stanford's chilling La belle dame snas merci”

Gramophone Magazine

November 2011

“Any suspicion that these songs might sound lukewarm or tentative in the hands of a countertenor is soon dispelled by Mehta's invigorating singing of Quilter's 'Blow, blow, thou winter wind' and the keen way he dramatises Stanford's 'La Belle Dame sans merci'. The verbal point he brings to a handful of Purcell songs in arrangements by Britten and Tippett is also appreciated.”

International Record Review

November 2011

“Mehta may not possess the most extensive of vocal paintboxes but he does gradate the shades at his disposal to good effect: pastels rather than oils. In Drake he has a partner who draws suitable sounds from the piano.”

Click on any of the works listed above for alternative recordings.

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