Britten: The Plough Boy

This page lists all recordings of The Plough Boy, by Benjamin Britten (1913-76) on CD, SACD & download (MP3 & FLAC). Generally, more recent releases are listed first, but with priority given to those that are in stock.

Recommendations

Editor's Choice
June 2012

All recordings

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The Voice of Peter Pears

The Voice of Peter Pears


Berkeley, L:

How Love Came In

Benjamin Britten (piano)

Bridge:

Love went a-riding

Benjamin Britten (piano)

Britten:

The Holy Sonnets of John Donne, Op. 35

Benjamin Britten (piano)

The Plough Boy

Benjamin Britten (piano)

Campion:

Shall I come, sweet love, to thee?

Julian Bream (guitar)

Copland:

Long Time Ago

Benjamin Britten (piano)

Simple Gifts (from Old American Songs, Set I)

Benjamin Britten (piano)

I Bought me a Cat

Benjamin Britten (piano)

Dowland:

I saw my Lady weepe

Julian Bream (guitar)

What if I never speed?

Julian Bream (guitar)

Ford, T:

Faire, sweet, cruell

Julian Bream (guitar)

Grainger:

Six Dukes Went a-Fishin'

Benjamin Britten (piano)

Ireland:

I Have Twelve Oxen

Benjamin Britten (piano)

Moeran:

In youth is pleasure

Benjamin Britten (piano)

Morley:

It was a lover and his lass

Julian Bream (guitar)

Rosseter:

What then is love but mourning?

Julian Bream (guitar)

Schubert:

Im Frühling, D882

Benjamin Britten (piano)

Auf der Bruck, D853

Benjamin Britten (piano)

An die Laute D905

Benjamin Britten (piano)

Die Taubenpost, D965A (D957 No. 14)

Benjamin Britten (piano)

Warlock:

Yarmouth Fair

Benjamin Britten (piano)


Peter Pears (tenor)

Regis - RRC1393

(CD)

$7.25

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

The English Song Series Volume 22 - Benjamin Britten

The English Song Series Volume 22 - Benjamin Britten


Britten:

Songs and Proverbs of William Blake, Op. 74

Tit for Tat

The Plough Boy

The foggy, foggy dew

Tom Bowling

O Waly, Waly

Oliver Cromwell

The Ash Grove

Down by the Salley Gardens

There's none to soothe

Little Sir William

Ca’ the yowes


Roderick Williams (baritone) & Iain Burnside (piano)

Britten wrote his Songs and Proverbs of William Blake, Op. 74 for the German baritone Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau in 1965. The singer admired the ‘concentration and enigmatic smile’ of the settings, and Britten constructed, through alternation of proverbs with songs, and an intense contemplation on the human and the eternal, one of his greatest song cycles. By contrast Tit for Tat sees Britten revisiting youthful, light-spirited settings of the poet Walter de la Mare. The folk-song arrangements are amongst his most famous, and beloved.

Britten’s song cycles are some of the greatest produced in the twentieth century. This disc focuses on his Blake cycle, one of his deepest and most contemplative. It’s contrasted with a very different and youthful cycle of five called Tit for Tat, written when he was a teenager.

The baritone Roderick Williams encompasses a wide repertoire, from baroque to contemporary music, in the opera house, on the concert platform and in recital. His recital appearances have taken him to London’s Wigmore Hall and many European festivals. He has an extensive discography and his recordings of English song with Iain Burnside have received particular acclaim.

“this sombre, discomfiting song-cycle [the Blake settings] remains a strikingly modern-sounding work, thanks partly to Blake’s existential poetry and aphoristic proverbs. Williams illuminates the text, but it’s a relief to move on to Britten’s boyhood settings of Walter de la Mare” Financial Times, 12th May 2012 ***

“Williams finds an ideal emotional stance - involved, totally word-conscious but never melodramatic...as a recorded recital, Williams - and Burnside, who is similarly colourful but keeps an interpretative distance from pumping up the text - have created an outstanding achievement.” Gramophone Magazine, June 2012

“Williams's voice is lighter than Fischer-Dieskau's, but his response to the texts is so intense, so well judged that there is never a lack of authority. The juvenile Walter De la Mare settings of Tit for Tat provide the perfect foil, followed by some of Britten's best-known folksong arrangements, all beautifully delivered without a trace of archness.” The Guardian, 24th May 2012 ****

“Williams brings a gentler, more intimate touch to what Fischer-Dieskau called their 'enigmatic smile': Blake's Tyger burns bright but with less fierce teeth, and there is more melancholy than menace in this performance's view of the human condition. Every beautifully placed word is matched by Iain Burnside's recreation of Britten's pianistic subtext, glinting with many a revealing musical gloss.” BBC Music Magazine, July 2012 ****

“It would be easy to exaggerate the claims of these songs [Tit for Tat], but presented so cleanly and with such understanding as do Williams and his superb pianist, Iain Burnside, they make just the effect the mature composer surely intended.” MusicWeb International, July 2012

GGramophone Awards 2012

Finalist - Solo Vocal

GGramophone Magazine

Editor's Choice - June 2012

20% off Naxos

Naxos English Song Series - 8572600

(CD)

Normally: $8.25

Special: $6.60

(also available to download from $6.00)

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Folk Stories

Folk Stories

Songs by Beethoven, Britten & Mahler


Bartók:

Régi keserves (No. 2 from 20 Hungarian Folksongs)

Aszszonyok, aszszonyok (No. 3 from 8 Hungarian Folksongs)

Istenem, istenem (No. 2 from 8 Hungarian Folksongs)

Ha kimegyek arr' a magos tetöre (No. 5 from 8 Hungarian Folksongs)

Beethoven:

Sad and luckless, WoO 153, No. 6

The Return to Ulster, WoO 152 No. 1

Thou Emblem of Faith, WoO 152 No. 11

Come, draw we round a cheerful ring, WoO 152 No. 8

Brahms:

Marienwürmchen, Volks-Kinderlieder, No. 13

Da unten im Tale (No. 6 from Deutsche Volkslieder, WoO 33)

Britten:

The Plough Boy

O Waly, Waly

The Bonny Earl o' Moray

Il est quelqu'un sur terre

Quand j’étais chez mon père

Mahler:

Wer hat dies' Liedlein Erdacht? (Des Knaben Wunderhorn)

Lob des hohen Verstandes (Des Knaben Wunderhorn)

Respighi:

No, non è morto il figlio tuo (No. 1 from Quattro liriche - Antica poesia popolare armena)

La mamma è come il pane caldo (No. 2 from Quattro liriche - Antica poesia popolare armena)

Io sono il madre (No. 3 from Quattro liriche - Antica poesia popolare armena)

Sibelius:

Den första kyssen, Op. 37 No. 1 (Text: J.L. Runeberg)

Säf, säf, susa, Op. 36 No. 4 (Text: Gustav Fröding)

Flickan kom från sin älsklings möte, Op. 37, No. 5

trad.:

A Sprig of Thyme

Spoken folk text


Cora Burggraaf (mezzo-soprano), Simon Lepper (piano), Liza Ferschtman (violin) & Floris Mijnders (cello)

On this Hybrid SACD recording ‘Folk Stories’, young multi-award winning mezzo-soprano Cora Burggraaf is joined by the pianist Simon Lepper, cellist Floris Mijnders, and highly-regarded violinist Liza Ferschtman. The disc features folk songs and arrangements by composers ranging from Beethoven, Brahms, and Mahler to some of the most important figures of the 20th century, including Britten, Bartók, and Sibelius.

The Dutch mezzo-soprano Cora Burggraaf graduated with distinction from the Royal Conservatoire in The Hague in 2002. She pursued her vocal studies in London at the Royal College of Music and the National Opera Studio. She has been the recipient of many prizes including the 2009/2010 ECHO Rising Star Award, the 2006 Elizabeth Everts Prize, the second prize in the International Vocalist Competition Den Bosch 2004, the 2003 Maggie Teyte Prize and the Miriam Licette Scholarship. Her studies in London were funded by the Dutch Fonds voor de Podiumkunsten and the Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds. In opera, Burggraaf has appeared at the Salzburg Festival, the Royal Opera House in London (for which she was named “Most Promising Newcomer of the Year” by The Observer), San Francisco Opera, Welsh National Opera, The Netherlands Opera, Garsington Opera, Opéra de Bordeaux and at the Aix-en-Provence Festival, BBC Proms and the Gergiev Festival.

“The essence of folk song is outward simplicity: this disc is a wide-ranging selection of arrangements and originals, performed with artful directness.” Sunday Times, 3rd February 2013

Released or re-released in last 6 months

Super Audio CD

Format:

Hybrid Multi-channel

Challenge Classics - CC72346

(SACD)

$20.25

Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days.

Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears: The Early HMV Recordings

Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears: The Early HMV Recordings


Britten:

Seven Sonnets of Michelangelo, Op. 22

Recorded 20th November 1942

The Holy Sonnets of John Donne, Op. 35

Recorded on 29th August and 12th December 1947

The Plough Boy

Recorded on 27th August 1947

Come ye not from Newcastle?

Recorded on 27th August 1947

O Waly, Waly

Recorded on 15th November 1950

The foggy, foggy dew

Recorded on 15th November 1950

Copland:

The Boatmen's Dance

Recorded on 30th September 1950

Long Time Ago

Recorded on 30th September 1950

The Dodger

Recorded on 29th September 1950

Simple Gifts (from Old American Songs, Set I)

Recorded on 29th September 1950

I Bought me a Cat

Recorded on 30th September 1950

Grainger:

Six Dukes Went a-Fishin'

Recorded on 15th November 1950

Schubert:

Auf der Bruck, D853

Recorded on 15th November 1950

Im Frühling, D882

Recorded on 29thth September 1950


Benjamin Britten (piano) & Peter Pears (tenor)

Britten and Pears early collaborations for HMV display an infectious vigour. Britten’s own works, the Seven Sonnets of Michelangelo, Op.22 and the Holy Sonnets of John Donne, Op. 35. are given definitive readings. Also included are folk song settings by Britten, Grainger and Copland and the programme concludes with two of Schubert’s most famous songs ‘Im Fruhling’ and ‘Auf der Bruck’. Essential listening for fans of Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears.

Heritage - HTGCD229

(CD)

$10.50

Usually despatched in 8 - 10 working days.

Winter Words: Songs By Britten

Winter Words: Songs By Britten


Britten:

Winter Words, Op. 52

Come ye not from Newcastle?

Little Sir William

Down by the Salley Gardens

Seven Sonnets of Michelangelo, Op. 22

The Ash Grove

The Last Rose of Summer

The Plough Boy


Nicholas Phan (tenor) & Myra Huang (piano)

American tenor Nicholas Phan makes his solo recording debut with a deeply personal approach to the songs of Britten.

‘Winter Words’ is the solo debut release by American tenor Nicholas Phan. The recording was made in the wake of a recital tour in 2010-11 which culminated in his Carnegie debut at Weill Hall. A graduate of the Manhattan School of Music and an alumnus of the Houston Grand Opera studio Nick has performed with the opera companies of Los Angeles and Seattle, symphony orchestras of Atlanta, St. Louis and San Francisco, and the Marlboro, Ravinia and Edinburgh Festivals, among others. He sang in Stravinsky’s Pulcinella with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under Pierre Boulez which won a Grammy Award.

Nick presents a deeply personal perspective of Britten’s music, encompassing his own performing experiences to audience reaction. He says: “I’ve been a fan of Britten since playing his Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra with my youth orchestra in Detroit as a teenage violinist. But my great devotion to his music increased to an obsession when an excellent pianist and good friend asked if I’d perform with her at a small university in Missouri. She suggested Winter Words, saying, “I think these would sound really great in your voice, and I’ve wanted to play them for ages, so indulge me.” I researched and played through Britten’s settings of Hardy’s poems and before long, I was hooked.”

Approaching the performance in a small Midwestern town with some trepidation (“how would they react?”), Nick describes the audience’s overwhelmingly positive response: “my favourite piece on the program … the most lasting impression.” Such is the enduring quality of Britten’s sophisticated yet direct song writing, of which Nick is a leading torchbearer.

“Phan has both the introspection and the power for this idiosyncratic approach to Italian fire...The Hardy tableaux of Winter Words are all atmospherically evoked alongside the best...but what wins this disc its five stars is the spacious, deeply moving delivery of my favourite among all the folksong settings, 'The Last Rose of Summer'...[Huang] always catches the distant gleam and proves a superb ghost-partner in 'The Ash-Grove'” BBC Music Magazine, December 2011 ****/*****

“Phan's fresh tenor voice, Myra Huang's intelligent pianism and the recording's warm acoustic conspire to make an inviting, distinctive recording...Phan's upper range blooms, not by fanning out at the top but in a more integrated emergence of vocal brightness...his main strength is spinning a long, expressive line in ways that seem to confide in the listener.” Gramophone Magazine, April 2012

“Others have identified Phan, a young American tenor, as a star in the making, and this fine Britten recital confirms it. The voice is graceful, mellifluous and durable, but behind it lie sharp intelligence, poetic insight and a confident individuality, allowing him a deeply personal response to the Hardy cycle Winter Words. In the Seven Sonnets, Phan is equally at ease with the demands of the bel canto devices.” Sunday Times, 2nd October 2011

Avie - AV2238

(CD)

$16.75

Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days.

Britten - Folksong Arrangements

Britten - Folksong Arrangements


Britten:

Down by the Salley Gardens

Little Sir William

The Bonny Earl o' Moray

The Trees They Grow So High

The Ash Grove

Oliver Cromwell

The Plough Boy

Sweet Polly Oliver

The Miller of Dee

The foggy, foggy dew

O Waly, Waly

Come ye not from Newcastle?

The Brisk Young Widow

Sally in Our Alley

Early one Morning

Ca’ the yowes

Tom Bowling

Greensleeves

Avenging and Bright

How Sweet the Answer

The Minstrel Boy

Dear Harp of My Country

Oft in the Stilly Night

The Last Rose of Summer


Steve Davislim (tenor) & Simone Young (piano)

Australia’s foremost tenor Steve Davislim and conductor/pianist Simone Young are reunited with Melba Recordings to present a mesmerising collection of Benjamin Britten’s Folksong Arrangements.

This new CD follows Seduction (MR301108), their highly praised exploration of orchestral songs of Richard Strauss.

Super Audio CD

Format:

Hybrid Multi-channel

Melba Recordings - MR301120

(SACD)

$15.75

Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days.

Very Best of English Song

Very Best of English Song


anon.:

Willow song

Alfred Deller (countertenor), Desmond Dupré (lute)

Balfe:

Come into the garden, Maud

Robert Tear (tenor), André Previn (piano)

Bishop, H R:

Home, Sweet Home

Robert Tear (tenor), André Previn (piano)

Brahe:

Bless this house

Dame Janet Baker (mezzo), Sir Philip Ledger (piano)

Britten:

The foggy, foggy dew

Robert Tear (tenor), André Previn (piano)

The Plough Boy

Robert Tear (tenor), André Previn (piano)

Serenade for Tenor, Horn & Strings, Op. 31

Robert Tear (tenor), Alan Civil (horn)

Northern Sinfonia, Sir Neville Marriner

Les illuminations, Op. 18

John Mark Ainsley (tenor), Pauline Lowbury (violin)

Britten Sinfonia, Nicholas Cleobury

Butterworth, G:

Loveliest of Trees

Anthony Rolfe Johnson (tenor), David Willison (piano)

Love Blows As The Wind Blows

Robert Tear (tenor)

Vernon Handley

Byrd:

Lullaby, my sweet little baby

Michael Chance (countertenor)

Fretwork

Elegy on the death of Thomas Tallis

Michael Chance (countertenor), Christopher Wilson (lute)

Carter, S:

Down Below

Ian Wallace (bass-baritone), Donald Swann (piano)

Delius:

Sea Drift

John Noble (baritone)

Liverpool Philharmonic Choir, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Sir Charles Groves

Dibdin:

Tom Bowling

Robert Tear (tenor), André Previn (piano)

Dowland:

Sorrow, stay

Dame Emma Kirkby (soprano), Anthony Rooley (lute)

Can she excuse my wrongs? (First Booke of Songes, 1597)

Dame Emma Kirkby (soprano), Anthony Rooley (lute)

Awake, sweet love

Dame Emma Kirkby (soprano), Anthony Rooley (lute)

Woeful heart

Dame Emma Kirkby (soprano), Anthony Rooley (lute)

Shall I sue?

Charles Daniels (tenor), David Miller (lute)

Me, me, and none but me

Charles Daniels (tenor), David Miller (lute)

Flow my teares (Lacrimæ)

Charles Daniels (tenor), David Miller (lute)

Elgar:

Sea Pictures, Op. 37

Dame Janet Baker (mezzo)

London Symphony Orchestra, Sir John Barbirolli

Two Songs Op. 60 (The Torch; The River)

Robert Tear (tenor)

City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Vernon Handley

Finzi:

Since we loved

Ian Bostridge (tenor), Julius Drake (piano)

Rollicum-rorum

Jonathan Lemalu (bass-baritone), Roger Vignoles (piano)

Dies natalis, Op. 8

Wilfred Brown (tenor)

English Chamber Orchestra, Christopher Finzi

Gurney:

Down by the Salley Gardens

Anthony Rolfe Johnson (tenor), David Willison (piano)

Black Stitchel

Anthony Rolfe Johnson (tenor), David Willison (piano)

Ireland:

The Salley Gardens

Dame Janet Baker (mezzo), Gerald Moore (piano)

Sea Fever

Jonathan Lemalu (bass-baritone), Roger Vignoles (piano)

Johnson, R:

Where the bee sucks

Alfred Deller (countertenor), Desmond Dupré (lute)

Full fathom five

Alfred Deller (countertenor), Desmond Dupré (lute)

Keel:

Trade Winds (No. 2 from Three Salt-Water Ballads)

Jonathan Lemalu (bass-baritone), Roger Vignoles (piano)

Morley:

It was a lover and his lass

Alfred Deller (countertenor), Desmond Dupré (lute)

O mistress mine

Alfred Deller (countertenor), Desmond Dupré (lute)

Mortimer:

The Smuggler's Song

Owen Brannigan (bass), Gerald Moore (piano)

Parry:

O Mistress Mine

Dame Janet Baker (mezzo), Gerald Moore (piano)

Peel:

Bredon Hill

Sir Thomas Allen (baritone), Geoffrey Parsons (piano)

In Summertime on Bredon

orchestral version

Frederick Harvey (baritone)

George Weldon

Purcell:

Fairest Isle (from King Arthur)

Nancy Argenta (soprano), Nigel North (lute)

Music for a while, Z583

Nancy Argenta (soprano), John Toll (harpsichord)

I attempt from love's sickness to fly in vain (from The Indian Queen)

Nancy Argenta (soprano), Paul Nicholson (harpsichord)

If music be the food of love, Z379

Nancy Argenta (soprano), Richard Boothby (lute), John Toll (harpsichord)

An Evening Hymn 'Now that the sun hath veiled his light', Z193

Nancy Argenta (soprano), Paul Nicholson (harpsichord)

Quilter:

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

Dame Janet Baker (mezzo), Gerald Moore (piano)

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

Sir Thomas Allen (baritone), Geoffrey Parsons (piano)

Come away, death

Ian Bostridge (tenor), Julius Drake (piano)

Sanderson, W:

Devonshire Cream and Cider

orchestral version

Frederick Harvey (baritone)

Philharmonia Orchestra, George Weldon

Stanford:

Drake's Drum

Robert Lloyd (bass), Nina Walker (piano)

The Old Superb

Robert Lloyd (bass), Nina Walker (piano)

Songs of the Sea, Op. 91

Benjamin Luxon (bass-baritone)

Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Norman Del Mar

Swann, D:

A Transport of Delight (The Omnibus)

Ian Wallace (bass-baritone), Donald Swann (piano)

The Wart Hog

Ian Wallace (bass-baritone), Donald Swann (piano)

The Hippopotamus Song (Mud, mud, glorious mud)

Michael Flanders & Donald Swann

trad.:

Greensleeves

Alfred Deller (countertenor), Desmond Dupré (lute)

Vaughan Williams:

Linden Lea

Dame Janet Baker (mezzo), Gerald Moore (piano)

The Lamb

Ian Partridge (tenor), Janet Craxton (piano)

The Shepherd

Ian Partridge (tenor)

Silent Noon

Ian Bostridge (tenor), Julius Drake (piano)

Songs of Travel

Sir Thomas Allen (baritone)

Sir Simon Rattle

Five Mystical Songs

John Shirley-Quirk (bass-baritone)

Choir of King's College Cambridge, English Chamber Orchestra, Sir David Willcocks

On Wenlock Edge

orchestral version

Ian Bostridge (tenor)

London Philharmonic Orchestra, Bernard Haitink

Walton:

Popular Song from 'Façade'

Fenella Fielding, Michael Flanders

Academy of St Martin-in-the-Fields, Sir Neville Marriner

Warlock:

My Own Country

Anthony Rolfe Johnson (tenor), David Willison (piano)

Passing By

Anthony Rolfe Johnson (tenor), David Willison (piano)

Pretty Ring Time

Anthony Rolfe Johnson (tenor), David Willison (piano)

Balulalow

Dame Janet Baker (mezzo), Sir Philip Ledger (piano)

Yarmouth Fair

Owen Brannigan (bass), Ernest Lush (piano)

Woodforde-Finden:

Kashmiri Song

Frederick Harvey (baritone), Jack Byfield (piano)


Ranging from Shakespeare’s contemporaries to the Victorian school and beyond, this fine box set calls on some of the greatest artists—including a wealth of British talent—to celebrate the diversity and longevity of English song. From simple melodic expression to the textural sophistication of orchestral settings, with the sea and landscape assuming a prominent role throughout, the songs included here comprise a fitting tribute, simultaneously revealing the rich cultural legacy of English poetry.

EMI British Composers - 6805132

(CD - 5 discs)

$28.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

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)

$39.00

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