Ireland: The three ravens - CD

This page lists all recordings of The three ravens, by John Ireland (1879-1962) on CD.

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Evening Songs

Evening Songs

Delius and Ireland Songs arranged for cello and piano


Delius:

Sunset from Five Songs from the Norwegian

Birds in the High Hall Garden

world première recording

In the Seraglio Garden

Love’s Philosophy (from Three Shelley Songs)

Over the mountains high

Serenade from Hassan

Through Long, Long Years

Little birdie

Slumber song (from Five Songs from the Norwegian)

With Your Blue Eyes

Ireland:

Spring Sorrow

Evening Song

world première recording

Sea Fever

The Holy Boy

Baby

The three ravens

Hope

Ladslove

Summer Schemes

Her song

In Summer Woods

world première recording


Julian Lloyd Webber (cello), Jiaxin Cheng (cello) & John Lenehan (piano)

Frederick Delius’s beautiful songs show his extraordinary gift for melody. John Ireland admired Delius enormously and his songs are inspired by a wide variety of literature, including his hugely popular setting of John Masefield’s Sea Fever. Renowned cellist Julian Lloyd Webber celebrates both composers’ remarkable melodic gifts in these sensitive arrangements, and pianist John Lenehan has received great acclaim for his Naxos recordings of Ireland’s complete piano music.

This recording revives a tradition which was common at the beginning of the last century, arranging the best of vocal music for instruments, of which the singing voice of the cello is one of the best suited. The performing cast here is something of a dream team. Julian Lloyd Webber’s large following will take little persuasion to explore his playing on this beautiful CD, and he is joined both by his cellist wife Jiaxin Cheng and Ireland expert John Lenehan, whose recordings include the Gramophone awardwinning Michael Nyman Piano Concerto (8554168).

Julian Lloyd Webber is one of today’s leading cellists. He has given the premières of more than fifty new works for cello and has inspired new compositions from composers as diverse as Malcolm Arnold and Joaquín Rodrigo to James MacMillan and Philip Glass. His partnership with John Lenehan began in the mid-1970s and they have since given recitals together all over the world. “…the doyen of British cellists” The Strad

“Hearing the songs of both composers without the texts, and played with such attention to contour and gradation, reminds us just how masterly and diverse both composers were in their art of the solo song...As the title of the disc suggests, this is an ideal collection to while away the summer evenings.” Gramophone Magazine, March 2012

“What emerges - as if we needed reminding - is the great gift of each man for melody: divorced from their texts, they work almost better in this form!” International Record Review, February 2012

20% off Naxos

Naxos - 8572902

(CD)

Normally: $8.25

Special: $6.60

(also available to download from $5.75)

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Simon Keenlyside: Songs of War

Simon Keenlyside: Songs of War


Bridge:

Thy hand in mine, H 124, for tenor and orchestra

Butterworth, G:

A Shropshire Lad - six songs

Bredon Hill and other songs

Finzi:

Fear No More The Heat O’ The Sun (No. 3 from Let us garlands bring, Op. 18)

Gurney:

When death to either shall come

In Flanders

Ireland:

Sea Fever

The Vagabond

The three ravens

Rorem:

An Incident

Somervell:

Into My Heart An Air That Kills (No. 9 from A Shropshire Lad)

There Pass The Careless People (No. 3 from A Shropshire Lad)

White in the moon the long road lies (No. 7 from A Shropshire Lad)

The Street Sounds To The Soldiers’ Tread (No. 5 from A Shropshire Lad)

Vaughan Williams:

Youth and Love

The infinite shining heavens

The Vagabond (from Songs of Travel)

Warlock:

The Night

Weill, K:

Beat! Beat! Drums!

Dirge For Two Veterans


Songs of War is a very personal selection of songs about war, carefully chosen by Simon Keenlyside. The songs contemplate the innermost thoughts of soldiers on the front lines, concentrating on themes of homesickness, longing, fear and love.

Simon Keenlyside has provided the sleeve notes himself for this album, displaying his own personal thoughts on the compositions, poetry and subject matter. The album’s cover image, provided by the Imperial War Museum, is a photograph of a soldier from WW1 writing a letter home, reflecting the album’s themes of longing and homesickness. Full song texts are included in the booklet.

“The title is deceptive, for these songs exude anything but a warlike mood. Almost all are English: the idiom is winsome, romantic and often quite innocent, as in Vaughan Williams’s “Youth and Love” and Bridge’s “Thy hand in mine”. At the heart of the recital – beautifully vocalised and artlessly characterised by Keenlyside – is Butterworth’s cycle of songs under the title “A Shropshire Lad”.” Financial Times, 5th November 2011 ****

“Despite the title, most of the songs in this admirable collection are anything but warlike. There is no place for patriotic bombast here; instead, these polished miniatures yearn for a vanished pastoral England...a beautifully judged recording, exquisitely sung; poignant but never sentimental.” The Observer, 13th November 2011

“At 52, the British baritone is in peak vocal health, and certainly young-sounding enough to portray the men in their late teens and twenties who leave their homes and loves...I can’t think of another baritone who can match him for beautiful tone, nuance of expression and immaculate diction...Keenlyside is incomparable here, in one of the song records of the year.” Sunday Times, 13th November 2011

“it’s not damning with faint praise to say that you don’t really notice the music at all – it’s Simon Keenlyside’s impeccable delivery that registers. Housman’s bittersweet musings are heartbreaking, notably in the penultimate poem; just listen to Keenlyside's mention of "the lads that will die in their glory and never be old"...A sober, intelligent CD, beautifully sung, immaculately accompanied. Keenlyside's sleeve notes are intelligent, insightful and touching.” The Arts Desk, 26th November 2011

“A sense of the mannered or precious can debase these songs; Keenlyside's sweeping, robust lyricism is deceptively effortless and exactly right...Dr Johnson once said that every man thinks worse of himself for never having been a soldier; Keenlyside has evidently thought deeply about this, making for a robust and involving recital.” BBC Music Magazine, January 2012 *****

“Keenlyside's mark is everywhere apparent and full marks to him for persuading Sony to indulge his choices...He is indeed a remarkable singer. He can encompass tragedy and irony, heroic and tender, he has magical half-tones, introduces a thrilling touch of head voice in Warlock's The Night, he can tell a story...Keenlyside's impassioned, almost overwhelming rendering of Frank Bridge's Thy Hand in Mine is, I think, the core and key to this compelling collection” International Record Review, January 2012

“One can imagine a more poignant account of the ghostly voices in 'Is my team ploughing?' but 'The lads in their hundreds' is all the more moving for Keenlyside's robustness...The rest of the programme is equally rewarding and Keenlyside's diction is perfect.” Gramophone Magazine, February 2012

GGramophone Awards 2012

Best of Category - Solo Vocal

Sony - 88697944242

(CD)

$17.25

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

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)

$13.00

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

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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