PAMELA BOWDEN...CHOIR OF KING'S COLLEGE CAMBRIDGE
CD
1 disc(s) 01-01-2011
Classical | Vocal
Geen voorraad
Extra info: | PAMELA BOWDEN...CHOIR OF KING'S COLLEGE CAMBRIDGE |
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Dirigent: | SIR DAVID WILLCOCKS |
Drager: | CD |
Maatschappij: | Bertus |
Label: | ELOQUENCE |
Barcode: | 0028948022960 |
Artikelcode: | 00204A |
Suffix - prefix: | 4802296 289 |
John Hahessy (boy alto) & Benjamin Britten (piano), Norma Procter (contralto), Peter Pears (tenor) & Benjamin Britten (piano), Pamela Bowden (contralto) & Peter Gellhorn (piano), Sir Geraint Evans (baritone), Terence Hanbury White (narrator) & Cambridge University Musical Society Chorus & Choir of King’s College, Cambridge, L’Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, Orchestra, Sir David Willcocks, Ernest Ansermet, Walter Goehr
This collection brings together rarities and surprises from the Decca/Argo Britten discography, a collection notable as much for the infrequency with which much of this music is performed, as it is for the fact that many of these are world-premiere recordings of Britten’s music. The source material itself is extremely rare and virtually every recording represented here is, in its LP/EP format, a collector’s item, largely from the Argo catalogue. The all-vocal program opens with Voices for Today which Britten wrote to mark the 20th anniversary of the founding of the United Nations. His devotion to excellent music for children is represented by a collection of songs, including five from Friday Afternoons and sung by the boy alto John Hahessy. It was Hahessy who was chosen over Norma Procter to sing the alto part in Britten’s Canticle II ‘Abraham and Isaac’. The earlier Procter/Pears/Britten version, recorded in 1957 but not released at the time in favour of the Hahessy recording; it is included on this collection. In later years, it was perhaps inevitable that other British singers would be compared with those who created and inspired Britten’s work, notably Ferrier, particularly after her early death. Pamela Bowden was one of those singers: she studied with Ferrier’s teacher, Roy Henderson, in London, and was hailed as the singer’s successor. She is represented by A Charm of Lullabies and it seemed sensible to include the remainder of the music on her original EP – two songs by Purcell – as bonus tracks for this release. A rare spoken-word appearance is made by author (and speaker) T.H. White, who reads an extract from his book The Sword in the Stone to an accompaniment of Britten’s music.
Britten:
A Charm of Lullabies for mezzo-soprano and pianoforte, Op. 41
Bottom’s Dream (from A Midsummer Night’s Dream)
Canticle II - Abraham & Isaac Op. 51
Corpus Christi Carol
Songs from "Friday Afternoons", Op. 7
The birds
The Sword in the Stone
Voices for Today, Op. 75
Purcell:
Don Quixote: incidental music, Z578
From Rosy Bow'rs (from Don Quixote)
Music for a while, Z583
"Britten's underrated United Nations anthem Voices for Today makes it onto disc at last, together with vintage recordings of artists the composer chose to work with."
BBC Music Magazine - October 2012
"Admirably read by the author, with a delightful mixture of sardonic humour and delicate description. The atmosphere is heightened by the music of Benjamin Britten, which brilliantly sharpens the word-pictures. […] It is all charming and will give great pleasure to young and old, for its story and the way it is told and for Britten's delicate score."
Gramophone Magazine