Vaughan Williams: A Cotswold Romance

This page lists all recordings of A Cotswold Romance, by Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958) on CD & download (MP3 & FLAC).

Cantata for tenor and soprano soloists, mixed chorus (SATB), and orchestra, adapted from the opera Hugh the Drover by Maurice Jacobson. Ten movements: Chorus: Men of Cotsall; SATB unaccompanied: Sweet Little Linnet; Tenor and SATB: Song of the Road; Tenor, soprano and SATB: Love at First Sight; SATB with baritone solo: The Best Man in England; Tenor solo: Alone and Friendless; Tenor, Soprano and SATB: The Fight and its Sequel; Tenor solo: Alone and Friendless; Tenor, Soprano and SATB: The Fight and its Sequel; Tenor solo: Hugh in the Stocks (Gaily I go to die); Soprano and SATB: Mary escapes (a) alternative version for women's voices: Here, Queen Uncrown'd; Tenor, soprano and SATB: Freedom at Last.

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Vaughan Williams: A Cotswold Romance & Death of Tintagiles

Vaughan Williams: A Cotswold Romance & Death of Tintagiles


Vaughan Williams:

A Cotswold Romance

Death of Tintagiles


Rosa Mannion (soprano), Thomas Randle (tenor) & Matthew Brook (baritone)

London Philharmonic Choir & London Symphony Orchestra, Richard Hickox

This re-release of two rarely heard works by Ralph Vaughan Williams, A Cotswold Romance and Death of Tintagiles, forms part of the new commemorative Hickox Legacy series on Chandos Records, leading up to (and continuing beyond) the fifth anniversary, in Nov 2013, of the conductor's untimely death. The recording is released on the Classic Chandos label at Mid Price.

Vaughan Williams composed his ‘ballad-opera’ Hugh the Drover, from which A Cotswold Romance is adapted, between 1910 and 1914. In his own words, he had an idea for an opera written ‘to real English words, with a certain amount of real English music’. The finished product, set in the Cotswold Village of Northleach during the Napoleonic wars, certainly does contain a host of identifiable English elements: the bringing-in of May, the bustling fair, and the prize-fight, for instance. Accommodating his publishers’ request for a version of the music which was more appropriate for concert performance, Vaughan Williams came up with the cantata A Cotswold Romance for tenor and soprano soloists with mixed-voice chorus and orchestra. The writing has the open, fresh, and vital quality that coloured many of Vaughan Williams’s works composed before the First World War.

In contrast, Death of Tintagiles, the incidental music for Maurice Maeterlinck’s play of the same name, is powerfully atmospheric and possesses a strong elegiac quality throughout. In five acts, the play concerns the tragic fate of a young child, Tintagiles, at the hands of his suspicious and jealous grandmother. Vaughan Williams perfectly captures the sense of foreboding and gloom in the play. In its simplicity and overall atmosphere the music recalls both Holst and Sibelius, while in the tender moments there are hints of A London Symphony, too.

BBC Music Magazine wrote of this disc: ‘Richard Hickox directs a vivid performance [of A Cotswold Romance] with splendid support from his assembled forces… Although not major works, these are notable additions to the catalogue, and the performances could hardly be better *****’.

Chandos Classics - The Hickox Legacy - CHAN10728X

(CD)

$8.50

(also available to download from $10.50)

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Vaughan Williams: A Cotswold Romance, etc.

Vaughan Williams:

A Cotswold Romance

Death of Tintagiles


Rosa Mannion (soprano - Mary), Thomas Randle (tenor - Hugh), Matthew Brook (baritone)

London Philharmonic Choir, London Symphony Orchestra, Richard Hickox

“A Cotswold Romance is a gift from Vaughan Williams to those who hold the music of Hugh theDrover in deep affection but who, under torture, would probably have to admit that the opera itself is less than perfect. Hugh, first produced in 1924, enjoyed sufficient immediate success for a set of records to be produced with the original cast. It then had to wait till 1979 for a complete recording on LP (reissued on EMI), and till 1994 for a new one on CD. The adaptation as a dramatic cantata came out in 1951, reducing the two-act opera to 10 numbers and rescoring some of the music to allow a larger part for the chorus.
The addition of wordless chorus is delightful, not least when the chorus sings the first part of Hugh's song of the road and re-enters with delicious harmonies at 'All the scented night'. Thomas Randle, who has the voice of a man of the road and a lover, is admirably cast. Rosa Mannion, with a slight hint of turning tremulous under pressure, is otherwise an ideal Mary, and the chorus is excellent.
Hickox conducts with brio and with due feeling for the romance.
Death of Tintagiles is incidental music written for a play by Maeterlinck, performed without much success in 1913. In his interesting notes, Stephen Connock associates it with Riders to theSea and the Sinfonia antartica; and it's true that there are sternly impressive moments, of menace and darkness. Though it hardly seems viable as an orchestral suite, it's good to have on this disc, nevertheless.”
Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010

Chandos - CHAN9646

(CD)

$16.75

(also available to download from $10.50)

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

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