Last Summer night... Best of English!
Drifting through the magic of Britten's world, including my favourite amongst his stage works: the haunting and sublime Turn of the Screw.
There is a remarkably common musical ground between three absolute masterpieces: Britten's Spring Symphony, Walton's celebrated Belshazzar's Feast and Bernstein's Chichester Psalms.
The BBC album by Maltman is a must-have, combining Vaughan Williams's fine Songs of Travel with John Adams's enchanting orchestration of 4 out of 5 Debussy's Poèmes de Baudelaire, plus a great rendition of Ravel's delightful set Don Quichotte à Dulcinée.
And of course Elgar's glorious Cello Concerto, and a rare and beautiful recording of the grand 2nd Symphony under the baton of the unforgotten Maestro from Kent: Malcolm Sargent.
Michael Tippett's masterpiece, A Child of Our Time, offers a more modern perspective to this post, which winds up with Delius's wonderful ultra-chromatic tone poems, featuring a few recordings of the lovely interlude from A Village Romeo & Juliet, the "Walk to the Paradise Garden", with its late Romantic flair and heady harmonies, gently taking us into a new Autumn.
Benjamin Britten
Spring Symphony Op. 44
Hymn to St. Cecilia Op. 27
5 Flower Songs Op. 47
Alison Hagley, Soprano, Catherine Robbin, Contralto,
John Mark Ainsley, Tenor.
Salisbury Cathedral Choristers & Monteverdi Choir
Philharmonia Orchestra
John Eliot Gardiner
DGG 453 433-2 (1995)
READ MORE...
9/20/2014
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