The Bride’s Tragedy The Hunter in His Career King Solomon’s Espousals The Lads of Wamphray, Sir Eglamore Tribute to Foster Thanksgiving Song The Wraith of Odin Marching Song of Democracy Danny Deever
This disc contains works by Grainger in versions for large choral forces, performed by the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
under its new Chief Conductor, Sir Andrew Davis, and featuring the Sydney Chamber Choir and Melbourne Symphony
Orchestra Chorus. The recording continues on from our nineteen-disc Grainger Edition box and brings our long-running
Grainger survey to an end.
Percy Grainger had a lifelong interest in poetry and prose. When he was a young boy, his mother would sing him to sleep
with Stephen Foster’s Camptown Races, the memories of which were later recalled in the musical extravaganza Tribute to
Foster. In his youth, Grainger was intrigued by the Icelandic sagas, which led to a deep fascination with all things Norse,
and ultimately inspired works such as The Wraith of Odin. The books by Kipling were another great inspiration during
Grainger’s student days in Frankfurt; Danny Deever, from Kipling’s Barrack-Room Ballads, is a grim depiction of the
execution of Deever for the murder of a fellow soldier. From passages of the ‘Song of Solomon’ sprang the mammoth
setting King Solomon’s Espousals. Marching Song of Democracy was inspired by the poetry by Walt Whitman and a chance encounter with a public statue of George Washington at the Paris Exhibition of 1900. Grainger’s original plan was to write the work for voices and whistlers only, and to have it performed by a chorus of men, women, and children singing and whistling to the rhythmic accompaniment of their tramping feet as they marched along in the open air. Later Grainger realised the need for instrumental colour, and this led him to score it for the concert hall – although he did stress that ‘an athletic, out-of-door spirit must be understood to be behind the piece from start to finish’.
The setting of Swinburne’s The Bride’s Tragedy is considered to be one of Grainger’s most intensely personal works. The
story tells of a girl who is to be married to a man she detests, and Grainger saw this work as ‘a personal protest against the sex-negation… that our capitalist world offered to young talents like me’.
The Hunter in His Career is a traditional ballad which takes its words from William Chappell’s collection Old English
Popular Music (1838 – 40). For his setting of Sir Eglamore, Grainger turned to John Stafford Smith’s 1812 collection
Musica Antiqua, in which the knight battles giants and wild boars for his beloved. The Lads of Wamphray is based on a
folk-poem from Sir Walter Scott’s Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border; it is an account of the noted feud between the families of Maxwell and Johnstone. Of Thanksgiving Song, Grainger wrote: ‘My Thanksgiving Song is honour-tokened