Wydawnictwo: Chandos
Seria: The Hickox Legacy
Nr katalogowy: CHAN 10725X
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: czerwiec 2012
EAN: 95115172520
Seria: The Hickox Legacy
Nr katalogowy: CHAN 10725X
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: czerwiec 2012
EAN: 95115172520
Holst: The Wandering Scholar; Suite de ballet, Op. 10; A Song of the Night, Op. 19 No. 1
Chandos - CHAN 10725X
Kompozytor
Gustav Holst (1874-1934)
Gustav Holst (1874-1934)
Wykonawcy
Ingrid Attrot, soprano
Neill Archer, tenor
Alan Opie, baritone
Donald Maxwell, bass
Northern Sinfonia / Richard Hickox
Ingrid Attrot, soprano
Neill Archer, tenor
Alan Opie, baritone
Donald Maxwell, bass
Northern Sinfonia / Richard Hickox
Utwory na płycie:
- Suite de ballet- Op 10 - Danse rustique
- Suite de ballet- Op 10 - Valse
- Suite de ballet- Op 10 - Scène de nuit
- Suite de ballet- Op 10 - Carnival
- A Song of the Night- Op 19 No 1
- The Wandering Scholar- Op 50 - Louis- When boughs are green in April -
- The Wandering Scholar- Op 50 - Alison- When rainbows follow flying showers -
- The Wandering Scholar- Op 50 - Philippe- Piggy- piggy- piggy -
- The Wandering Scholar- Op 50 - Alison- Someone is coming!-
- The Wandering Scholar- Op 50 - Pierre- Before that I was twenty -
- The Wandering Scholar- Op 50 - Philippe- Learned? Comely? -
- The Wandering Scholar- Op 50 - Alison- Heigho- a pretty knave! -
- The Wandering Scholar- Op 50 - Louis- Hell lie all day in the sun -
- The Wandering Scholar- Op 50 - Pierre- As I was walking here to-day
This re-release of the Suite de Ballet, A Song of the Night, and The Wandering Scholar by Gustav Holst forms part of the new Hickox Legacy commemorative 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.
Both the Suite de Ballet (1899) and A Song of the Night (1903) are early works. The Suite de Ballet is light music, expertly written and colourfully scored. It brings to mind the works of Edward German and Sir Arthur Sullivan, but also glances in the direction of French composers, at Chabrier in ‘Danse rustique’ and Saint-Saëns in ‘Scene de nuit’. In A Song of the Night Holst demonstrates confident and imaginative writing for solo violin. He left no clues as to the specific meaning of the song, but at the time of writing he was deeply immersed in learning Sanskrit, and his enthusiasm for Indian mythology may well have inspired the work.
Through her collection Mediaeval Latin Lyrics and her book The Wandering Scholars, Helen Waddell (1889 – 1965) exercised considerable influence on British music in the 1930s, and her translations have been set to music by many composers, Holst being one of them. The Wandering Scholar (1929 – 30) is a one-act comic chamber opera featuring just four characters, and no chorus. Holst uses modest orchestral forces; there are no big numbers, no set-pieces, and no overture. It is a simple rural tale, told simply, with original music that suggests (but is not actual) folk music. The premiere performance took place in 1934, but Holst was too ill to attend, and died soon after, before he had the chance to review any of the details over which he had felt uncertain as he was composing the work. In 1968, his daughter Imogen Holst and her friend Benjamin Britten edited the score in order to address some of Holst's earlier concerns.
BBC Music Magazine wrote of the disc: ‘Holst’s Chaucer-like farce [The Wandering Scholar] comes up freshly minted in this lively recording… the couplings reveal Holst in light-music and Romantic modes, respectively, and throughout Hickox inspires some full-blooded music-making.’
From CHAN 9734
Both the Suite de Ballet (1899) and A Song of the Night (1903) are early works. The Suite de Ballet is light music, expertly written and colourfully scored. It brings to mind the works of Edward German and Sir Arthur Sullivan, but also glances in the direction of French composers, at Chabrier in ‘Danse rustique’ and Saint-Saëns in ‘Scene de nuit’. In A Song of the Night Holst demonstrates confident and imaginative writing for solo violin. He left no clues as to the specific meaning of the song, but at the time of writing he was deeply immersed in learning Sanskrit, and his enthusiasm for Indian mythology may well have inspired the work.
Through her collection Mediaeval Latin Lyrics and her book The Wandering Scholars, Helen Waddell (1889 – 1965) exercised considerable influence on British music in the 1930s, and her translations have been set to music by many composers, Holst being one of them. The Wandering Scholar (1929 – 30) is a one-act comic chamber opera featuring just four characters, and no chorus. Holst uses modest orchestral forces; there are no big numbers, no set-pieces, and no overture. It is a simple rural tale, told simply, with original music that suggests (but is not actual) folk music. The premiere performance took place in 1934, but Holst was too ill to attend, and died soon after, before he had the chance to review any of the details over which he had felt uncertain as he was composing the work. In 1968, his daughter Imogen Holst and her friend Benjamin Britten edited the score in order to address some of Holst's earlier concerns.
BBC Music Magazine wrote of the disc: ‘Holst’s Chaucer-like farce [The Wandering Scholar] comes up freshly minted in this lively recording… the couplings reveal Holst in light-music and Romantic modes, respectively, and throughout Hickox inspires some full-blooded music-making.’
From CHAN 9734