Ireland: London Overture

This page lists all recordings of London Overture, by John Ireland (1879-1962) on CD & download (MP3 & FLAC). Generally, more recent releases are listed first, but with priority given to those that are in stock.

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John Wilson conducts Ireland

John Wilson conducts Ireland


Ireland:

Mai-Dun

The Forgotten Rite

Satyricon - Overture

The Overlanders - suite from the film

London Overture

Epic March


“This attractive compilation, sparkily performed by John Wilson and the Hallé, is exactly the kind of push Ireland's reputation needs” The Guardian, 19th June 2009 ****

“The advertising blurb on the CD cover quotes a reviewer in The Times. It states quite categorically, “I'd rather listen to the Hallé play English music than any other orchestra in the world.” … if I am honest I would have to agree that this present performance of John Ireland's orchestral music is truly superb. The present CD is a veritable feast of Ireland's orchestral music. In fact it makes an excellent introduction to his music. There are six works on this disc, which represent different facets and interests of the composer's achievement. Perhaps the most important works are those associated with location and history - Mai-Dun and The Forgotten Rite. Much of his music was infused with evocations of place and the people who had lived there. This was especially the case when those places had connections with the prehistoric and had 'mystical aspects' associated with their beliefs and rituals. He had a heightened sense of 'awareness of place': a kind of sixth-sense. This is a great CD that every Ireland enthusiast will insist on having. The main competition for this music is the Boult recordings on Lyrita and the Hickox edition on Chandos. All these recordings are essential and I would not be without them. I was introduced to Ireland's orchestral music through the Lyrita LPs so I naturally have a soft spot for them. However, John Wilson and the Hallé have excelled themselves and produced a landmark disc that presents this great music with enthusiasm, passion and understanding.” John France, MusicWeb International Recording of the Month

“John Wilson directs to the manner born and draws a crisply disciplined response from the Hallé, who seem to be enjoying the experience enormously.” Gramophone Magazine, December 2009

Hallé - CDHLL7523

(CD)

$15.75

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Bax: Tintagel, etc.

Bax:

Tintagel

Delius:

The Walk to the Paradise Garden

A Song of Summer

Irmelin Prelude

Koanga: La Calinda

In a Summer Garden

Ireland:

London Overture


“Lovely playing. A classic performance of Tintagel (unlikely ever to be surpassed) and a deeply moving interpretation of A Song of Summer.” Gramophone Magazine

“For collectors wanting Tintagel alone, Barbirolli's version is the finest ever recorded and is unlikely ever to be surpassed. The performance has a great romantic sweep and the full-bodied 1965 still sounds splendid.” Penguin Guide, 2011 edition

EMI Great Recordings of the Century - 3799832

(CD)

$10.25

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

John Ireland 70th Birthday Concert

John Ireland 70th Birthday Concert

Recorded by the BBC live at the Royal Albert Hall, London on 10 September 1949


Ireland:

London Overture

Piano Concerto in E flat major

Eileen Joyce (piano)

The Forgotten Rite - Prelude

These Things Shall be


Sir Adrian Boult championed his fellow British composers; the results can be heard to this day on a multitude of recordings with the LPO on Decca and Lyrita, many still considered benchmark recordings. This included Vaughan Williams symphonies complete, extensive documentation of the works of Elgar and Holst, as well as Delius and Bax along with Ireland with Boult recording the symphonic rhapsody Mai-Dun, The Overlanders and in 1967 the Piano Concerto with pianist Eric Parkin.

Eileen Joyce is one of the few female classical artists to enjoy a celebrity, almost pop status, commencing during WWII and continuing right through the 1950's, her popularity often being compared with that of Vera Lynn. As Vera Lynn was the 'Wartime Sweetheart', entertaining the troops, Eileen Joyce boosted morale through the war performing as part of Jack Hylton's Blitz Tours. Her audience grew immensely through her film appearances, most famously performing the Rachmaninov concerto in Brief Encounter. As an Australian, she was a 'colonial' showman in Britain at a time of elite intellectual and social snobbery, and this somewhat worked against her, Joyce opting for the BBC Proms popular concerts at the expense of Royal Philharmonic Society recognition enjoyed by her contemporaries Solomon and Curzon.

John Ireland drew musical inspiration from his English heritage, its poets and landscapes. He became a celebrated composer during the first half of the 20th century, championed by conductors such as Sir Adrian Boult, who conducted the première of These things shall be in 1937. Boult programmed this Promenade concert in 1949 to mark Ireland’s 70th birthday.

“At times the sound calls for a fair degree of tolerance but the ear quickly adjusts - and the actual music-making is a delight. A London Overture in particular evinces an entrancing flexibility, playfulness and songful warmth, while Eileen Joyce's partnership with Boult in the Piano Concerto frequently soars to inspirational heights (the slow movement is utterly magical - Boult's sublimely shaped opening paragraph effortlessly matched by Joyce's rapt pianism). Boult also directs These Things Shall Be with maximum conviction... the sound here is surprisingly full-bodied...” Gramophone Magazine, December 2009

LPO - LPO0041

(CD)

$11.50

(also available to download from $10.50)

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

Boult conducts Ireland

Boult conducts Ireland


Ireland:

Tritons - Symphonic Prelude

The Forgotten Rite - Prelude

Mai-Dun

London Overture

Epic March

Themes from Julius Caesar

(arr. Geoffrey Bush)

The Overlanders - suite from the film

(ed. Charles Mackerras)


“Assembled from three of Boult's four Lyrita LPs devoted to Ireland, this generous programme launches with the red-blooded symphonic prelude Tritons (a student offering from 1899). Boult and the LPO do not shirk the melodrama and go on to lend equally dedicated advocacy to the magical 1913 prelude TheForgotten Rite and glowering 1921 symphonic rhapsody Mai-Dun.
The stand-out track remains Boult's wonderfully spry and observant account of A LondonOverture (1936), which is easily a match for Barbirolli's almost exactly contemporaneous LSO version for EMI. The 1942 Epic March, too, glints with memorable defiance. The JuliusCaesar diptych is less immediately gripping, but the five-movement suite compiled by Charles Mackerras from Ireland's 1946 score for Ealing Studios' The Overlanders certainly has its moments, not least the touching 'Romance' (which plunders material from A Downland Suite of 1932) and infectiously jaunty outer portions of the central 'Intermezzo'.
Considering some of these sessions took place as long ago as December 1965, the judiciously refurbished sound still packs quite a punch.
Altogether a very welcome reissue.”
Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010

Lyrita - SRCD240

(CD)

$17.00

Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days.

Ireland - Greater love hath no man

Ireland - Greater love hath no man


Ireland:

Vexilla Regis

Greater Love Hath No Man

These Things Shall be

London Overture

The Holy Boy

Epic March


Paula Bott (soprano), Teresa Shaw (contralto), James Oxley (tenor), Bryn Terfel (baritone)

London Symphony Orchestra & Chorus, Richard Hickox

Chandos Classics - CHAN10110X

(CD)

$8.50

(also available to download from $10.50)

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

Sir John Barbirolli: The Great EMI Recordings

Sir John Barbirolli: The Great EMI Recordings


Bax:

The Garden of Fand

Tintagel

Berlioz:

Les Nuits d'été, Op. 7

Brahms:

Tragic Overture, Op. 81

Symphony No. 3 in F major, Op. 90

Butterworth, G:

A Shropshire Lad - Rhapsody

Debussy:

La Mer

Delius:

The Walk to the Paradise Garden

arr. Beecham

In a Summer Garden

Elgar:

Cello Concerto in E minor, Op. 85

Introduction & Allegro for strings, Op. 47

Serenade for Strings in E minor, Op. 20

Elegy for strings, Op. 58

Sospiri, Op. 70

Sea Pictures, Op. 37

Symphony No. 1 in A flat major, Op. 55

Enigma Variations, Op. 36

Ireland:

London Overture

Mahler:

Symphony No. 5 in C sharp minor

Rückert-Lieder (5 songs, complete)

Puccini:

Madama Butterfly (highlights)

Ravel:

Daphnis et Chloé - Suite No. 2

La Valse

Ma Mère l'Oye

Sibelius:

Finlandia, Op. 26

Karelia Suite, Op. 11

Pohjola's Daughter, Op. 49

Valse Triste, Op. 44 No. 1

Lemminkäinen Suite, Op. 22: The Swan of Tuonela (No. 2)

Tchaikovsky:

Symphony No. 4 in F minor, Op. 36

Serenade for strings in C major, Op. 48

Vaughan Williams:

Symphony No. 2 'A London Symphony'

Symphony No. 5 in D major

Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis

Fantasia on Greensleeves


Sir John was born in Holborn, London, on 2 December 1899. His father and grandfather were both professional violinists who had settled in London from Italy and were employed in theatre orchestras around the West End. They had also been members of the orchestra at La Scala Opera House in Milan and had played under Arturo Toscanini. Barbirolli's mother came from a town on the Atlantic coast in the south-west of France.

The EMI Classics catalogue of recordings includes many unique treasures by most of the great musicians of the 20th century, but few are greater than those made for the Company by Sir John. This set not only includes some of the truly incomparable interpretations he made for EMI but also some he made during the period he was with Pye. Many of these are with his beloved Hallé Orchestra, the orchestra with which he became most closely associated during the last 30 years of his life.

Barbirolli had an enormous love of English music and was one of its greatest exponents. More than any other conductor he revived the public's affection for the music of Elgar back in the 60s, when EMI issued his irreplaceable Elgar recordings, virtually all of which have never been out of the catalogue.

Perhaps the best-known of Barbirolli's Elgar recordings is that of the Cello Concerto with the young Jacqueline du Pré. In this set we have taken the opportunity to re-issue the earlier recording of the Concerto with André Navarra. This is a marvellous performance that has largely been over-shadowed by the du Pré, but it is no less excellent and deserving of wider appreciation.

The music of Delius was another of Barbirolli's great loves and his recordings rival those by Beecham, who was regarded as Delius's prime advocate. Here we have two works by Delius: the beautiful orchestral interlude from the opera A Village

Romeo and Juliet and one of his longer tone poems. Barbirolli's final recording was of music by Delius, made in the month of his death.

Vaughan Williams's music had a prominent place in Barbirolli's repertoire and, being a Londoner, the London Symphony had a very special place in Sir John's affections. His excellent 1957 Pye recording with the Hallé Orchestra is featured here. Barbirolli made the first ever recording of the Fifth Symphony for EMI in 1944 and it was this 1962 Philharmoniarecording that marked his return to EMI, after a seven year period of recording for Pye.

As well as these three great English composers we also have music by Bax, Butterworth and Ireland, whose music was also very close to Sir John's heart. The recordings of Bax's The Garden of Fand and Butterworth's A Shropshire Lad are being released on CD for the first time.

English music was not the only great love of Sir John's life. From early in his career he championed the music of Sibelius and recorded some of its greatest interpretations. His 1962 recording of the Second Symphony, made with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra for Reader's Digest, has still to be surpassed, and the Violin Concerto he did with Ida Haendel for EMI is still among the best. Sibelius is here represented with a selection of short orchestral pieces, most notable amongst which is a stunning performance of Pohjola's Daughter. French music, too, was another musical genre in which Sir John excelled and the recordings he made for Pye in the late 50s received rave reviews when they were first issued.

In the mid-sixties EMI went with Sir John to Vienna to record a very successful cycle of Brahms's Symphonies with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. The recordings were singled out not only for the quality of the orchestral playing but also for the excellent quality of the recorded sound; this version of No.3 was reckoned to be the best of the interpretations.

Tchaikovsky is not a composer one necessarily associates with Barbirolli but the 1957 recording of Symphony No.4 that he made with the Hallé is an exceptionally exciting performance. The 1964 recording of the popular Serenade for Strings, made with the London Symphony Orchestra, is extremely fine with an exquisite third movement.

Barbirolli came late to the music of Mahler and it was not until he was in his sixties that he made the first of only a handful of marvellous recordings. He made this recording of the Fifth, and the Five Rückert Lieder with Janet Baker and the NewPhilharmonia, just a year before he died.

Throughout his life Sir John loved to conduct operas, especially those by Verdi and Puccini, and it is only fitting that we should include on the final disc of this set some excerpts from one of the finest Butterfly recordings ever made.

“[The Fifth Symphony] is on of Barbirolli's greatest recordings, opening magically and unsurpassed in lyrical intensity, with many wonderfully glowing moments...[Pohjola's Daughter] is an extremely impressive performance, spacious, yet no less exciting for its slower than usual tempi...[Mahler's Fifth is] one of the most warmly affecting performances ever committed to disc.” Penguin Guide, 2011 edition

EMI Artist Boxes - 4577672

(CD - 10 discs)

$34.50

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