Ireland: The Trellis

This page lists all recordings of The Trellis, by John Ireland (1879-1962) on CD. Generally, more recent releases are listed first, but with priority given to those that are in stock.

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Tell me the truth about love…

Tell me the truth about love…


Barber, S:

Rain has fallen

Boulanger, L:

Vous m'avez regardé avec toute votre âme

Brahms:

Wir wandelten, wir zwei zusammen Op. 96/2

Am Sonntag Morgen Op. 49 No. 1

Du sprichst, daß ich mich täuschte, Op. 32 No. 6

Bridge:

Adoration, H 57

Chausson:

Le Charme, Op. 2 No. 2 (Silvestre)

Copland:

Heart we will forget him

Debussy:

La chevelure

Dunhill:

The Cloths of Heaven, Op. 30/3

Fauré:

Fleur jetée, Op. 39 No. 2

Grieg:

Jeg Elsker Deg, Op. 41 No. 3

Hahn, R:

Infidélité

Ireland:

The Trellis

Loewe, C:

Ich kann's nicht fassen, nicht glauben, Op. 60 No. 3

Marx:

Und gestern hat er mir Rosen gebracht

Quilter:

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

Rachmaninov:

Summer nights Op.14 No. 5

Schoenberg:

Warnung, Op. 3 No. 3

Schubert:

Du liebst mich nicht D756 (Platen)

Schumann:

Seit ich ihn gesehen (No. 1 from Frauenliebe und Leben, Op. 42)

Strauss, R:

Nachtgang Op. 29 No. 3

Weill, K:

Je ne t'aime pas (text: Maurice Magre)

Wieniawska:

En sourdine

Wolf, H:

O wär dein Haus durchsichtig wie ein Glas

Geh' Geliebter, geh' jetzt (No. 34 from Spanisches Liederbuch: Weltliche Lieder)


Amanda Roocroft (soprano) & Joseph Middleton (piano)

Some say love's a little boy,

And some say it's a bird,

Some say it makes the world go around,

Some say that's absurd…

W.H. AUDEN

Charting the course of a love affair – in song – through the eyes of a young woman who begins by asking the universal question, Tell me the truth about love presents a programme of 19th and 20th century song.

The album takes its title from Benjamin Britten’s 1938 seductive setting of W.H. Auden’s amusing poem and tries to pin down and define the most elusive of human emotions.

The story takes us from love at first sight with Schumann’s Seit ich ihn gesehen, breathless with wonder and fervent reverance and Chausson’s Le charme which describes the quiver of excitement and the tender veneration the girl feels when the boy’s smile catches her unawares to Loewe’s Ich kann’s nicht fassen, nicht gluben to describe the lovers first encounter.

As the love story unfolds and the couple become closer, it is illustrated with music such as Strauss’s Nachtgang, Rachmaninov’s Midsummer nights and Bridge’s Adoration. However the magic is soon broken and Sunday brings deception and betrayal. The girl finds out that the young man does not love her and she bitterly awakes from her dream. The feeling of love lost is brought to life through Brahm’s Am Sonntag Morgen, Schubert’s Du liebst mich nicht and Kurt Weill’s Je ne t’aime pas.

As a postlude, Britten’s arrangement of Early one morning perfectly sums up the story of the young girl and the final message of ‘how could you use a poor maiden so?’ lingers in the ear.

Amanda Roocroft has secured an international reputation as one of Britain’s most exciting singers, in opera, concert and recital and Joseph Middleton enjoys a busy and varied career as a chamber musician and song accompanist.

Champs Hill Records - CHRCD040

(CD)

$14.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Summertime

Summertime


Arne:

Where the Bee Sucks

Barber, S:

Sure on this shining night, Op. 13 No. 3

The Monk and His Cat (No. 8 from Hermit Songs)

Berlioz:

L'Île inconnue (from Les Nuits d'été)

Villanelle (from Les nuits d'été, Op. 7)

Bernstein:

My House (from Peter Pan)

Brahms:

Meine Liebe ist grün, Op. 63 No. 5

Bridge:

Go Not, Happy Day

Delius:

To Daffodils

Elgar:

The Shepherd's Song

Fauré:

Clair de Lune, Op. 46 No. 2

Soir Op. 83 No. 2

Notre amour Op. 23 No. 2

Fraser-Simson:

Vespers

Gershwin:

Summertime (from Porgy and Bess)

Head, M:

The Little Road to Bethlehem

Ireland:

The Trellis

Lehmann:

Ah, moon of my delight

Porter, C:

The Tale of the Oyster

Quilter:

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

Who is Sylvia

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

Rutter:

The Lord bless you and keep you

Schubert:

Auf dem Wasser zu singen, D774

Schumann:

Der Nussbaum, Op. 25 No. 3

trad.:

The Lark in the Clear Air

Vaughan Williams:

Orpheus With His Lute

Warlock:

Sleep

Wood, Haydn:

A brown bird singing


Felicity Lott (soprano) & Graham Johnson (piano)

Dame Felicity Lott, revered British soprano, says of this CD:

“ Summertime also has many of my favourite songs in English, French and German. We made the CD at a friend`s house, and the sessions were so relaxed, with no London traffic to cause endless retakes! It`s a real mix of beautiful songs of all kinds, on a summer theme. I chose songs I loved, from Gershwin to Christopher Robin….

Three centuries of song are represented here, and, as BBC Music Magazine's Hilary Finch put it “such is the skill of Johnson's programming that the entire recital seems to be a single, sustained exhalation of rapture and reflection”

She went on to say:

The upper reaches of Lott's still gleaming soprano inhabit Barber's 'Shining Night' and Fauré's Clair de lune'. And her robust English version of Schubert's 'Who is Sylvia?' finds an irresistible companion in Arne's 'Where the Bee Sucks', with its veritable midsummer night's dream of an accompaniment from Johnson. The artists' palpable sense of joy and well-being gathers momentum as they visit Berlioz's 'L'île inconnue' and as they sing on the water with Schubert. . . . And Lott and Johnson know well that the only way to face sentiment is to acknowledge its own integrity, as they do when they listen to Haydn Wood's 'Little Brown Bird' and eavesdrop with Fraser-Simson on Christopher Robin saying his prayers.

This CD features songs from a great variety of composers - Gershwin, Barber, Cole Porter, Bernstein, Brahms, Schubert, Arne, Schumann, Berlioz, and many more. A full 29 tracks of summer-themed songs!

Champs Hill Records - CHRCD008

(CD)

$14.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Peter Pears - A Treasury of English Song

Peter Pears - A Treasury of English Song


Bennett, R R:

Tom O’Bedlam’s Song

with Joan Dickson (cello)

Berkeley, L:

How Love Came In

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

Bridge:

Tis but a week

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

Goldenhair

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

When you are old

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

So perverse

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

Journey's end

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

Go Not, Happy Day

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

Love went a-riding

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

Britten:

Folksongs (selection)

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

Let the florid music praise! (from On this Island)

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

Busch, W:

If thou wilt ease thine heart

with Viola Tunnard (piano)

Come, o come, my life's delight

with Viola Tunnard (piano)

Two Songs of William Blake

with Viola Tunnard (piano)

Bush, A:

Voices of the Prophets

with Alan Bush (piano)

Butterworth, G:

Is My Team Ploughing?

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

Delius:

To Daffodils

with Viola Tunnard (piano)

Dieren:

Dream Pedlary

with Viola Tunnard (piano)

Take, o take those lips away

with Viola Tunnard (piano)

Grainger:

Bold William Taylor

with Viola Tunnard (piano)

Holst:

Persephone (No. 1 from 12 Songs Op. 48)

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

Ireland:

The Land of Lost Content

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

The Trellis

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

Three Songs

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

I Have Twelve Oxen

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

Moeran:

The Merry Month of May

with Viola Tunnard (piano)

In youth is pleasure

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

Oldham, A:

Chinese Lyrics (3)

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

Rainier:

Cycle for Declamation

Tippett:

Songs for Ariel

with Benjamin Britten (piano)

Warlock:

Piggesnie

with Viola Tunnard (piano)

Along the Stream

with Viola Tunnard (piano)

Yarmouth Fair

with Benjamin Britten (piano)


Peter Pears (tenor)

These recordings, made over the space of a decade from March 1954 to December 1964, capture Peter Pears in the high summer of his career and at the peak of his powers, a period roughly framed by some of the highlights of his partnership with Benjamin Britten: the creation of the character of Peter Quint in the composer’s The Turn of the Screw in Venice in September 1954 and the euphoric response to the first performance in 1962 of the War Requiem, one of the great events of post-war English musical life. The title ‘An Anthology of English Song’ was chosen by Decca for a projected three volumes featuring Pears. The first, with Julian Bream, included Renaissance lute songs by Dowland, Morley and others. The second was presumably intended to included 18th and 19th-century titles but was never made. The third, made in 1955, consisted of 20th-century English song, and much of this material appears on CD for the first time [CD2: 10-21].

A year earlier, Pears and Britten recorded nine of Britten’s folk song arrangements; these particular recordings (made in the same sessions as those for Winter Words) too receive their first release on CD [CD2: 1-9].

More British song was recorded with Britten in 1963 and with pianist Viola Tunnard (who worked closely with Britten in the 1960s, particularly on the Church Parables) in 1964. Of special interest too, will be works Pears commissioned from contemporary composers including the Cycle for Declamation by the South-African-born Priaulx Rainier, a testing tour de force for unaccompanied voice and Richard Rodney Bennett’s dramatic 1961 setting for voice and cello of the anonymous 17th-century ballad Tom O’Bedlam’s Song.

“Gracefully patrician in tone but always perceptive, Pears, with Britten's acute accompaniment, explores a wide range of British song from Butterworth to Tippett.” BBC Music Magazine, December 2011 ****

“To Daffodils is exquisitely sung, and The merry month of May is a tour de force spectacularly brought off by Viola Tunnard” … “The record is completed by a splendid scena by Richard Rodney Bennett, the accompaniment for cello alone, and three prose texts by John Donne set by Priaulx Rainier for unaccompanied voice. Peter Pears sings these with marvellous intensity and understanding, and Joan Dickson’s cello playing in Tom O’ Bedlam is very good indeed.” Gramophone Magazine

Australian Eloquence - 4801273

(CD - 2 discs)

$14.25

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

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)

$14.50

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

John Ireland plays John Ireland: Broadcast & Concert Performances

John Ireland plays John Ireland: Broadcast & Concert Performances

Original broadcasts/recordings made between 1928-51


Ireland:

Amberley Wild Brooks

The undertone (No. 1 of Four Preludes)

Ragamuffin (No. 2 of London Pieces)

Soho forenoons (No. 3 of London Pieces)

The advent

Peter Pears (tenor)

Hymn for a child

Peter Pears (tenor)

My fair

Peter Pears (tenor)

The Salley Gardens

Peter Pears (tenor)

The soldier’s return

Peter Pears (tenor)

The scapegoat

Peter Pears (tenor)

Sonata in G minor for cello & piano

Antoni Sala (cello)

The Land of Lost Content

Peter Pears (tenor)

Fantasy Sonata

Frederick Thurston (clarinet)

Hawthorne Time

Peter Pears (tenor)

I Have Twelve Oxen

Peter Pears (tenor)

The Trellis

Peter Pears (tenor)


John Ireland (piano)

Off-air recordings

Dutton Historic - CDBP9799

(CD)

$8.25

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

Her Song - Orchestral Songs & Arias

Her Song - Orchestral Songs & Arias

Recorded: The Colosseum, Town Hall, Watford, 27-29 January 2009


Elgar:

The Torch, Op. 60, No. 1

The wind at dawn

Pleading, Op. 48 No. 1

Like to the Damask Rose

Shepherd's Song

Three Songs, Op. 59

There Are Seven That Pull the Thread

The Sun Goeth Down from ‘The Kingdom’, Op. 51

Gritton, E:

O Stay, Madonna

Orch. In 2008 by Robin Gritton. World premiere recording

Ireland:

Five Songs for Soprano & Orchestra

Orchestrated in 2008 by Graham Parlett. World premiere recording (in this version)

Love and friendship

My True Love Hath My Heart

The Trellis

Adoration

I Have Twelve Oxen

Four Songs for Soprano & Strings

Orchestrated in 2008 by Graham Parlett. World premiere recording (in this version)

The Salley Gardens

The Heart’s desire

Baby

Her song

Parry:

Guenever’s Soliloquy from ‘Guenever’ Act I, Scene 4

Orchestrated by Jeremy Dibble. World premiere recording

Sanders, J D:

Evening on Severn No. 4 from ‘Gloucestershire Visions’

World premiere recording


Susan Gritton (soprano) & Cynthia Fleming (solo violin)

BBC Concert Orchestra, Martyn Brabbins

Susan Gritton’s solo recital with the BBC Concert Orchestra and Martyn Brabbins is focussed on orchestral songs by Elgar and John Ireland, varied with delightful solo items by Susan’s grandfather Eric Gritton, by John Sanders, and an aria from Parry’s opera ‘Guenever’, here orchestrated by Jeremy Dibble. This is an enchanting and pioneering survey, with ten Elgar orchestral songs ringingly presented and crowned by Susan Gritton’s affecting reading of The Sun Goeth Down from ‘The Kingdom’. This is the first time so substantial a survey of Elgar’s orchestral songs has been presented in one programme. The song by Eric Gritton, O Stay, Madonna, is a ripe example of lyrical Edwardiana and contrasts nicely with John Sanders’ atmospherically floated Evening on Severn, and Parry’s affecting but stoutly written aria for Queen Guenever facing death at the stake. In contrast there are two groups of John Ireland songs, nine in all, each especially eloquent when heard with orchestral accompaniment. They include the title song Her Song of 1925, which makes a touching lyrical foil to Elgar’s exuberance.

“Throughout Gritton is musically purposeful… while Martyn Brabbins and the BBC players do a fine job.” BBC Music Magazine, October 2009 ****

“…performances are all one could hope for. Susan Gritton brings resplendent tone and intelligent observation to the task in hand, and she receives bright-eyed sensitive support from the BBC Concert Orchestra under Martyn Brabbins.” Gramophone Magazine, January 2010

Dutton - CDLX7228

(CD)

$16.50

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

Love’s Voice

Love’s Voice


Finzi:

Oh Fair to See, Op. 13

Gurney:

On Wenlock Edge

Bread and Cherries

Down by the Salley Gardens

Ha'nacker Mill

Snow

Hawke and Buckle

Ireland:

Friendship in misfortune

The three ravens

The Trellis

The Land of Lost Content

Venables, I:

Love’s Voice, Op. 22

Vitae summa brevis, Op. 33 No. 3

Flying Crooked, Op. 28 No. 1

At Midnight, Op. 28 No. 2

The Hippo, Op. 33 No. 6


Nathan Vale (tenor) & Paul Plummer (piano)

Includes world premiere recordings

“Vale and his accomplished colleague Paul Plummer start with an unpublished song by Gurney, the spirited, stirring On Wenlock Edge with a grand tune…Immediately one is made aware of Vale’s clarity of tone, a clarity matched by that of the recording…As satisfying as he is in the liveliness of On Wenlock Edge, he is equally so in Down by the Salley gardens, which he sings with a touch of regret…He also conveys the sadness of Edward Thomas’s poem snow.” International Record Review

Somm - New Horizons - SOMM063

(CD)

$13.25

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

Peter Pears - Anniversary Tribute

Peter Pears - Anniversary Tribute


Bach, J S:

Ich will nur dir zu Ehren leben (from Christmas Oratorio)

Stuttgarter Kammerorchester, Karl Münchinger

St John Passion, BWV245: Then led they Jesus from Caiaphas to the judgement

Stuttgarter Kammerorchester, Karl Münchinger

Mass in B minor: Benedictus

Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks, Eugen Jochum

St John Passion, BWV245: Then led they Jesus from Caiaphas to the judgement

John Shirley-Quirk, Gwynne Howell

English Chamber Orchestra, Wandsworth School Boys Choir

Bennett, R R:

Tom O’Bedlam’s Song

Joan Dickson (piano)

Berlioz:

L'Enfance du Christ, Op. 25: Les pèlerins étant venus

Goldsbrough Orchestra, The St. Anthony Singers, Colin Davis

Bridge:

Tis but a week

When you are old

Goldenhair

So perverse

Journey's end

Britten:

Serenade for Tenor, Horn & Strings, Op. 31

Dennis Brain (horn)

The Boyd Neel String Orchestra

Seven Sonnets of Michelangelo, Op. 22

At Night (from The Turn of the Screw)

Peter Pears (Peter Quint), David Hemmings (Miles), Arda Mandikian (Miss Jessel), Olive Dyer (Flora), Jennifer Vyvyan (Governess)

English Opera Group Orchestra

Rome is now ruled by the Etruscan upstart (from The Rape of Lucretia)

English Chamber Orchestra

Canticle II - Abraham & Isaac Op. 51

Norma Procter (alto)

War Requiem, Op.66: Move him into the sun

Galina Vishnevskaya (soprano)

London Symphony Chorus, The Bach Choir, Melos Ensemble, London Symphony Orchestra

Six Hölderlin Fragments, Op. 61

We committed his body to the deep (from Billy Budd)

London Symphony Orchestra

The Holy Sonnets of John Donne, Op. 35

How now my love? (from A Midsummer Night's Dream)

Josephine Veasey (Hermia)

London Symphony Orchestra

Albert the Good! (from Albert Herring)

English Chamber Orchestra

May God bless the Queen (from Owen Wingrave)

Benjamin Luxon (Owen Wingrave), Peter Pears (Sir Philip Wingrave), Heather Harper (Mrs Coyle), Sylvia Fisher (Miss Wingrave), John Shirley-Quirk (Spencer Coyle), Jennifer Vyvyan (Mrs Julian), Dame Janet Baker (Kate), Nigel Douglas (Lechmere)

English Chamber Orchestra

Canticle V: The Death of St. Narcissus, Op. 89

Osian Ellis (harp)

The boy, Tadzio, shall inspire me (from Death in Venice)

English Chamber Orchestra, Steuart Bedford

Now the Great Bear and Pleiades (from Peter Grimes)

Old Joe has gone fishing (from Peter Grimes)

The bridge is down, we half swam over (from Peter Grimes)

Orchestra of the Royal Opera House

O Waly, Waly

The foggy, foggy dew

The Brisk Young Widow

Le Roi s'en va-t'en chasse

The Plough Boy

Busch, W:

The echoing green

The Shepherd

If thou wilt ease thine heart

Come, o come, my life's delight

Viola Tunnard (piano)

Bush, A:

Voices of the Prophets

Alan Busch (piano)

Delius:

To Daffodils

Viola Tunnard (piano)

Dieren:

Dream Pedlary

Take, o take those lips away

Viola Tunnard (piano)

Dowland:

I saw my Lady weepe

In darkness let me dwell

Julian Bream (guitar)

Elgar:

The Dream of Gerontius: Sanctus fortis

London Symphony Orchestra & Chorus, The Choir of King's College, Cambridge

Grainger:

Bold William Taylor

Handel:

Love in her eyes sits playing (from Acis and Galatea)

Lo! Here my love (from Acis and Galatea)

Thurston Dart (harpischord)

Philomusica of London, Adrian Boult

Ireland:

The Land of Lost Content

The Trellis

Love and friendship

Friendship in misfortune

The One Hope

Lutoslawski:

Paroles tissées

London Sinfonietta, Witold Lutoslawski

Moeran:

The Merry Month of May

Viola Tunnard (piano)

Morley:

It was a lover and his lass

Julian Bream (guitar)

Pilkington:

Rest sweet Nimphs

Julian Bream (guitar)

Purcell:

When a cruel long winter (from The Fairy Queen)

Rainier:

Cycle for Declamation

Rosseter:

What then is love but mourning?

Julian Bream (guitar)

Schubert:

Gute Nacht (No. 1 from Winterreise, D911)

Der Lindenbaum (No. 5 from Winterreise, D911)

Frühlingstraum (No. 11 from Winterreise, D911)

Der Leiermann (No. 24 from Winterreise, D911)

Das Wandern (No. 1 from Die schöne Müllerin, D795)

Der Neugierige (No. 6 from Die schöne Müllerin, D795)

Der Jäger (No. 14 from Die schöne Müllerin, D795)

Die böse Farbe (No. 17 from Die schöne Müllerin, D795)

Ganymed, D544 (Goethe)

Schumann:

Im wunderschönen Monat Mai (No. 1 from Dichterliebe, Op. 48)

Ich grolle nicht (No. 7 from Dichterliebe, Op. 48)

Ich hab' im Traum geweinet (No. 13 from Dichterliebe, Op. 48)

Die alten, bosen Lieder (No. 16 from Dichterliebe, Op. 48)

Szenen aus Goethes Faust: Die ihr dies Haupt umschwebt im luft'gem Kreise

Jenny Hill, Margaret Cable, John Elwes, Neil Jenkins, John Noble

Aldeburgh Festival Singers, English Chamber Orchestra

Schütz:

Matthäus Passion: Jesus aber stund für dem Landpleger

Meriel Dickinson, John Shirley-Quirk, Benjamin Luxon

Heinrich Schütz Choir, Roger Norrington

Tippett:

Boyhood's End

The Heart's Assurance

Noel Mewton-Wood (piano)

Songs for Ariel

Vaughan Williams:

On Wenlock Edge

Zorian String Quartet


The recorded legacy of the great English tenor Peter Pears is substantial and wide-ranging. It embraces Baroque repertory and Elizabethan songs as well as a vast amount of twentieth-century English music and German Lieder.

This anniversary collection features Pears in a wide selection of this repertory and it also charts his career as a recording artist from landmark recordings such as the first recording of Britten's Serenade for tenor, horn and strings (made in 1944) through to Britten's Canticle V The Death of St Narcissus (composed in 1974), recorded near the end of his career in 1976.

Many recordings included here appear on CD for the first time as international releases. Performances of Vaughan Williams’ On Wenlock Edge, and of Tippett’s Songs for Ariel , are of especial interest, and in a different vein, Pears sings Lutoslawski’s Paroles tissées, which he commissioned.

A true rarity is the first ever release of Schubert's Ganymed.

Packaging is cap box; 28-page booklet features a new essay on Pears by George Hall.

“so astute is his characterization and formidable his musical intelligence that he is able to portray the comic flavour of Albert Herring with as much conviction as the haunting melancholy of Death in Venice....All in all, a superb tribute to one of the most characterful and important singers of the twentieth century.” Penguin Guide, 2011 edition

Decca - 4782345

(CD - 6 discs)

$38.75

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

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