Ireland: When I am Dead, My Dearest

This page lists all recordings of When I am Dead, My Dearest, by John Ireland (1879-1962) on CD & download (MP3 & FLAC).

Recommendations

Choral & Song Choice
July 2008

All recordings

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Sea Fever

Sea Fever

Roderick Williams sings baritone songs by British composers


Bainton, E:

Christmas Eve (Edward Carpenter)

Little Heart within Thy Cage (Edward Carpenter)

Bax:

The Song of the Dagger (The Bard of the Dimbovitza)

Welcome, Somer (Geoffrey Chaucer)

Viking-Battle-Song (Fiona Macleod)

Boughton:

Fair is Our Lot (Rudyard Kipling)

The Coastwise Lights (‘Our Brows are Bound with Spindrift’) (Rudyard Kipling)

The Price of Admiralty (‘We Have Fed Our Seas’) (Rudyard Kipling)

Dyson:

Valour (John Bunyan)

Morning and Evening (Isaac Watts)

The Seekers (John Masefield)

Hymn to the Stars (William Habington)

Praise (George Herbert)

Ireland:

Sea Fever

When lights go rolling around the sky

Youth’s Spring-Tribute (D G Rossetti)

The Holy Boy

Hope the Hornblower

If I had Dreams to Sell

When I am Dead, My Dearest

Parry:

King Arthur’s Farewell to Guenever (Una Taylor)

Ailish Tynan (soprano)


Recorded at The Colosseum, Town Hall, Watford, 5-6 June 2007

“Roderick Williams is his usual mellifluous self, but these baritone songs, often orchestrated by other hands, are a very mixed bag…” BBC Music Magazine, March 2008 ***

“Roderick Williams is, as ever, admirable in the quality of his tone, the clarity of his diction and the cleanness of his style. The well arranged orchestral accompaniments are sympathetically conducted and carefully played.” Gramophone Magazine, March 2008

Dutton - CDLX7199

(CD)

$16.25

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

My Own Country: An English song collection

My Own Country: An English song collection


Bax:

The White Peace (Fiona Macleod)

Bridge:

Strew No More Red Roses

Go Not, Happy Day

Elgar:

Canto Popolare (In Moonlight)

Speak, Music, Op. 41, No. 2

Pleading, Op. 48 No. 1

Twilight, Op. 59 No. 1

The Blue-eyes Fairy

Fraser-Simson:

Halfway Down

Lines written by a Bear of Very Little Brain

Politeness

Missing

Holst:

Ushas

Ireland:

The Trellis

I Have Twelve Oxen

When I am Dead, My Dearest

Lehmann:

Mockturtle soup

Henry King

Parry:

O Mistress Mine

My Heart is like a Singing Bird

Under the greenwood tree (Shakespeare) English Lyrics Set VI No. 6

Good Night

Quilter:

Music, when soft voices die, Op. 25 No. 5 (Shelley)

Love's Philosophy, Op. 3 No. 1 (Shelley)

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

Go, lovely Rose, Op. 24 No. 3 (Edmund Wailer)

Warlock:

Ha'nacker Mill

My Own Country

The Night

Sleep


Felicity Lott (soprano) & Graham Johnson (piano)

Felicity Lott brings her delicacy and rich understanding to a collection of English song inspired by the idyllic Sussex countryside.

“A lovingly planned programme by Graham Johnson, beautifully sung by Dame Felicity” Gramophone

The Englishness typified here is not derived from one unique musical style; rather from each composerʼs response to the texts. Graham Johnson groups together songs under headings Country Courtship. . . To Music. . . . Loveʼs Philosophy. . . . Country Scenes. . . . Night & Dawn. . . .Childrenʼs Cornerʼ. . . and Envoys on this charming - and occasionally surprising - disc.

It includes songs by Quilter, Elgar, Parry, Ireland, Bax and Holst. The Elgar songs Speak Music and In Moonlight (included under the heading ʻTo Musicʼ) remind us that the paradigm of Englishness Elgar cultivated was more to do with his association with ʻPomp and Circumstanceʼ than necessarily musical matters. As part of ʻCountry Scenesʼ, Bridgeʼs jolly Go Not, Happy Day gives nothing away about its year of publication, 1916, and the scars which led to later music of a more sombre tone.

Also included are a selection of Harold Fraser-Simpsonʼs songs based on verses from A.A. Milneʼs The Hums of Pooh, and settings by Liza Lehmann - the Edwardian English operatic soprano - including Matilda from ʻFour Cautionary Talesʼ by Hillaire Belloc, a duet with both parts taken by Felicity Lott. The CD takes its title from Peter Warlockʼs setting of another Belloc text - My Own Country.

Dame Felicity Lott lives in Sussex and was the very first artist to perform in the Music Room at Champs Hill. In 2005 she and Graham Johnson returned there to mark the 30th anniversary of her Wigmore debut with this programme (previously release on the ASV label). Champs Hill Records will also be releasing new recordings of further Elgar songs with Dame Felicity in October 2011.

Champs Hill Records - CHRCD024

(CD)

$14.25

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

The English Song Series Volume 18 - Ireland

The English Song Series Volume 18 - Ireland


Ireland:

Great Things

Three Thomas Hardy Songs

Sea Fever

The Bells of San Marie

The Vagabond

Santa Chiara

Tryst

During music

Youth’s Spring-Tribute (D G Rossetti)

Penumbra

Spleen

I Have Twelve Oxen

We'll To The Woods No More

Five Songs To Poems By Thomas Hardy

The Cost

When I am Dead, My Dearest

The Salley Gardens

Tutto e sciolto

If I had Dreams to Sell


Roderick Williams (baritone) & Iain Burnside (piano)

“Among the 26 Ireland songs on this disc are two cycles devoted to Thomas Hardy, dating from 1925 and 1926. Settings of Hardy's poems were of course at the heart of Gerald Finzi's output of songs, and there is nothing in these Ireland cycles that approaches the fine-honed responses and harmonic imagination of those, sensitively though Williams and Burnside present them. In fact it's hard to pin down a distinctive creative personality in any of these songs, and ironically it's the cycle We'll to the Woods No More from 1927 that seems the most individual, with texts from that favourite source for early 20th-century English composers, AE Housman, that has the most character.” The Guardian, 20th June 2008 ***

“Roderick Williams, with his sympathetic, warmly rounded baritone, and Iain Burnside are eloquent advocates of all these songs. Even they, though, cannot dispel a sense of sameishness, with pastoral-tinged melancholy too rarely relieved by something more impassioned or invigorating.” The Telegraph, 14th June 2008

“Another irresistible volume in The English Song Series: a compilation of John Ireland which reveals the sheer breadth of emotional experience and variegated piano writing within his songs. Every word is tasted, pungently flavoured and given rigorous new life, with Iain Burnside's piano playing sentient to every second of Williams's singing.” BBC Music Magazine, July 2008 *****

“Roderick Williams is such a good singer he can make the voice part sound vocal and natural in a way not many have succeeded in doing. …the pianist, Iain Burnside, plays with a sureness of touch to match the highly skilled naturalness of Williams's singing.” Gramophone Magazine, September 2008

“Despite the popularity of 'Sea Fever' and (literally) two or three others, the songs of John Ireland are often found oddly inaccessible. Of all the acknowledged masters of English songs in the 20th century Ireland is the hardest to pin down, to identify even. It has something to do with an elusiveness about his writing for the voice. When you look at the piano parts you feel contact with a pair of hands (his) touching the keyboard; but (with few exceptions) it's hard to believe that he 'sang' the songs as he wrote. The point here is that Roderick Williams is such a good singer he can make the voice part sound vocal and natural in a way not many have succeeded in doing. The songs are high for baritone, low for tenor, and they are written in a way that seems not to know of the difficulties of passing from one area of the voice to another or returning to a particular region with uncomfortable persistency. For Roderick Williams such difficulties seem hardly to exist. The listener's task eases proportionately.
Before going further, it should be said that the pianist, Iain Burnside, plays with a sureness of touch to match the highly skilled naturalness of Williams's singing. And it has to be added that Williams still does not seem to be a communicator in song in the sense that we can see the images flash before him (Terfel-like) as he sings the words. Sometimes, as in The Vagabond (Masefield, not Stevenson) and If there weredreams to sell, he catches the mood extraordinarily well even so. Williams and Burnside find a clearer feeling for Ireland's anxious tenderness and uneasy joy than in any previous recital of his songs.”
Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010

BBC Music Magazine

Choral & Song Choice - July 2008

20% off Naxos

Naxos English Song Series - 8570467

(CD)

Normally: $8.25

Special: $6.60

(also available to download from $5.75)

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.)

John Ireland - The Songs

John Ireland - The Songs


Ireland:

Songs Of A Wayfarer

When lights go rolling around the sky

Hope the Hornblower

Sea Fever

Marigold

Five Songs To Poems By Thomas Hardy

Three Songs

We'll To The Woods No More

Two Songs

Songs Sacred And Profane

Five Xvith-Century Poems

Blow out you Bugles

If I had Dreams to Sell

I Have Twelve Oxen

Spring Sorrow

The Bells of San Marie

The Journey

The merry month of May

The Vagabond

When I am Dead, My Dearest

Santa Chiara

Great Things

If we must part

Tutto e sciolto

The Heart’s desire

The sacred flame

Remember

Hawthorne Time

The East Riding

Love is a sickness full of woes

The Land of Lost Content

Two Songs for Tenor

The three ravens

Bed in Summer

Mother And Child

Earth’s Call

Three Arthur Symons Songs

What art thou thinking of?

Three Thomas Hardy Songs


Benjamin Luxon (baritone), John Mitchinson (tenor), Alfreda Hodgson (contralto) & Alan Rowlands (piano)

3 CDs for price of 2

Lyrita - SRCD2261

(CD - 3 discs)

$33.00

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

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