The English Song Series

Rozario / Wyn-Rogers / Maltman / +
The English Song Series

23,03 EUR  19,19 EUR
CD
Naxos
Release date: 19/Nov/2002
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Sales Rank: #228918 in Other Pop
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Style: Other Pop
Product No.: 2240026

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Details / Tracklist: MP3 Audio listen now for free 01. Johnson, Graham "O mistress mine"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 02. Johnson, Graham "Orpheus with his lute"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 03. Johnson, Graham "Sweet Kate"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 04. Johnson, Graham "Songs of Innocence: The shepherd"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 05. Johnson, Graham "Songs of Innocence: The blossom"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 06. Johnson, Graham "Songs of Innocence: The lamb"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 07. Johnson, Graham "Songs of Innocence: Nurse's Song"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 08. Johnson, Graham "From the Song Cycle Maud: Birds in the high Hall-garden"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 09. Johnson, Graham "From the Song Cycle Maud: Go not, happy day"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 10. Maltman, Christopher "From the Song Cycle Maud: Come into the garden, Maud"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 11. Johnson, Graham "James Lee's Wife speaks at the window"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 12. Johnson, Graham "James Lee's Wife: By the fireside"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 13. Catherine Wyn-Rogers "James Lee's Wife: In the doorway"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 14. Johnson, Graham "James Lee's Wife: On the cliff"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 15. Johnson, Graham "James Lee's Wife: Among the rocks"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 16. Johnson, Graham "The Bargain"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 17. Johnson, Graham "Fain would I change that note"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 18. Rozario, Patricia "Shepherd's cradle song"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 19. Johnson, Graham "Come to me in my dreams"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 20. Maltman, Christopher "Dainty little maiden"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 21. Johnson, Graham "When Spring returns"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 22. Johnson, Graham "The Shropshire Lad: Lovliest of trees"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 23. Johnson, Graham "The Shropshire Lad: When I was one-and-twenty"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 24. Johnson, Graham "The Shropshire Lad: There pass the careless people"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 25. Johnson, Graham "The Shropshire Lad: In summer-time on Bredon"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 26. Johnson, Graham "The Shropshire Lad: The street sounds to a soldier's tread"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 27. Johnson, Graham "The Shropshire Lad: On the idle hill of summer"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 28. Maltman, Christopher "The Shropshire Lad: White in the moon the long road lies"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 29. Johnson, Graham "The Shropshire Lad: Think no more lad, laugh, be jolly"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 30. Johnson, Graham "The Shropshire Lad: Into my heart an air that kills"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 31. Johnson, Graham "The Shropshire Lad: The lads in their hundreds"
Number of discs: 1
Extra-Infos: Johnson, Graham/ Rozario, Patricia Etc
Description:Somervell's four songs on poems from William Blake's Songs of Innocence were written in 1889, dedicated to Dolly and Gwen, and simple and child-like in form and appeal, perfectly crafted examples of such work. The song cycle based on Tennyson's monodrama Maud dates from 1898. There are thirteen songs in the whole work that traces the story from the memories of the suicide of the protagonist's father, ruined by unfortunate speculation, making his son's match with Maud, daughter of his father's closest friend, and his betrayer, impossible. Three of these are included here. Maud's family return to the Hall and gradually the young man at the heart of the drama falls in love with her again. In the fifth song of Somervell's cycle, Birds in the high Hall-garden, the lovers meet, before Maud returns to the house, with the flowers she has picked. The verses that tell of the arrival of another to woo her are omitted. The seventh song, Go not, happy day, expresses the love of the couple. The first part of the poem ends with the words that provide the ninth song of Somervell's cycle, Come into the garden, Maud, words perhaps more familiar in the setting by Balfe. The singer calls Maud to the garden, as he hears the sound of music from the Hall, where he has not been invited. As she approaches, he is in ecstasy, but the song does not tell how their meeting is to be interrupted by Maud's brother, his quarrel with her lover, and her brother's death in the dreadful hollow, where the drama had started. In the remaining songs Maud's lover seeks exile abroad and goes out of his mind, while Maud, in his absence, dies. The cycle ends with the singer's resolve to meet his fate in war for his country. The song cycle derived from Robert Browning's James Lee's Wife was published in 1907 with a dedication to Marie Brema, a Liverpool-born singer of German-American parentage who, in 1894, was the first English-born singer to appear at Bayreuth, where she sang Ortrud in Lohengrin and Kundry in Parsifal. James Lee's Wife first appeared, under the title James Lee, in 1864 in Browning's Dramatis Personae and from the original nine poems Somervell takes five. The first version has an orchestral accompaniment, but the songs were later arranged for an accompaniment of piano quintet, and then simply with a piano accompaniment. As in other dramatic monologues by Browning, the woman of the title reveals her story, telling first of changing love, more dramatically in the second song, By the Fireside, as she tells of the rot and rust, run to dust, of a ship seemingly safe in port, as she and her husband had seemed. The same idea continues in the third song, In the Doorway, from which the middle two verses of the original poem are omitted. In the fifth of Browning's poems, On the Cliff, she sings of the parched vegetation on the rock and how from this may come color and life, as with the minds of men. The cycle ends with the seventh of Browning's poems, Among the Rocks, in which she proclaims her message that If you loved only what were worth your love, / Love were clear gain.
Recorded 23rd-25th March, 1998 at All Saint's Church, East Finchley, London. First issued on Collins Classics in 1998
No. of tracks: 31
Manufacturer No.: 8557113
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