Shakespeare Songs
£13.25
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Label: Warner
Cat No: 9029594473
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Vocal/Choral
Release Date: 2nd September 2016
Contents
Works
When that I was but a little tiny boyFancie
Callino casturame, BK35
Let us garlands bring, op.18
Elizabethan Songs (5)
Full fathom five
Where the bee sucks
Lieder (4), op.31
O Mistress Mine
Fancy, FP174
Shakespeare Songs (3), op.6
Songs (3) from William Shakespeare
Songs for Ariel (3)
Pretty Ring Time
Sweet and Twenty
Take, O take those lips away
Artists
Ian Bostridge (tenor)Antonio Pappano (piano)
Elizabeth Kenny (lute)
Michael Collins (clarinet)
Lawrence Power (viola)
Adam Walker (flute)
Works
When that I was but a little tiny boyFancie
Callino casturame, BK35
Let us garlands bring, op.18
Elizabethan Songs (5)
Full fathom five
Where the bee sucks
Lieder (4), op.31
O Mistress Mine
Fancy, FP174
Shakespeare Songs (3), op.6
Songs (3) from William Shakespeare
Songs for Ariel (3)
Pretty Ring Time
Sweet and Twenty
Take, O take those lips away
Artists
Ian Bostridge (tenor)Antonio Pappano (piano)
Elizabeth Kenny (lute)
Michael Collins (clarinet)
Lawrence Power (viola)
Adam Walker (flute)
About
Shakespeare’s peerless feeling for the music of the English language has inspired countless composers, from those who set the Bard’s verse during his lifetime to musicians as diverse as Britten, Finzi, Korngold and Stravinsky. Ian Bostridge and Sir Antonio Pappano, together with four outstanding chamber musicians, delve into the rich Shakespeare legacy for this brand new recording, marking the playwright’s quarter-centenary with a delectable programme of works written for Jacobean productions, Restoration revivals and the modern concert hall. As guests Ian has invited his friends the lutenist Elizabeth Kenny, and for Stravinsky’s Three Songs flautist Adam Walker, violist Lawrence Power and clarinetist Michael Collins.
“Shakespeare has been a part of my life as a performer from the very start,” says Ian Bostridge, “Britten's Midsummer Night's Dream and Ades's The Tempest have been milestones for me as a singer. It has been a great joy to rediscover the music in Shakespeare's incomparable texts and the music that has been written over the past four centuries to clothe them, from the simplest songs of his own contemporaries, through the melodic delights of the likes of Haydn, Britten and Finzi to the matchless complexity of the late Stravinsky. Working again with Tony Pappano has been a joy; and making my first recording with a long term musical partner, lutenist Liz Kenny, a particular pleasure.”
Sound/Video
Paused
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1Finzi: Let us Garlands Bring, Op. 18: I. Come Away, Come Away Death
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2Finzi: Let us Garlands Bring, Op. 18: II. Who is Silvia?
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3Finzi: Let us Garlands Bring, Op. 18: III. Fear No more the Heat o' the Sun
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4Finzi: Let us Garlands Bring, Op. 18: IV. O Mistress Mine
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5Finzi: Let us Garlands Bring, Op. 18: V. It Was a Lover and his Lass
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6Byrd: Caleno Custore Me
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7Morley: It Was a Lover and His Lass
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8Wilson: Take O Take Those Lips Away
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9Morley: O Mistress Mine
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10Johnson: Where the Bee Sucks
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11Johnson: Full Fathom Five
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12Schubert: An Silvia, D. 891
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13Haydn: She Never Told Her Love, Hob. XXVIa No. 34
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14Quilter: 3 Shakespeare Songs, Op. 6: I. Come Away, Death
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15Gurney: 5 Elizabethan Songs (The Elizas): III. Under the Greenwood Tree
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16Warlock: Pretty Ring Time
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17Warlock: Sweet and Twenty
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18Korngold: 4 Shakespeare Songs, Op. 31: I. Desdemona's Song
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19Korngold: Songs of the Clown, Op. 29: I. Come Away Death
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20Korngold: Songs of the Clown, Op. 29: II. Adieu, Good Man Devil
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21Poulenc: Fancie, FP 174
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22Britten: Fancie - 'Tell Me Where is Fancy Bred'
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23Tippett: Songs for Ariel: I. Come Unto These Yellow Sands
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24Tippett: Songs for Ariel: II. Full Fathom five
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25Tippett: Songs for Ariel: III. Where the Bee Sucks
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26Stravinsky: 3 Songs from William Shakespeare: I. Musick to Hear
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27Stravinsky: 3 Songs from William Shakespeare: II. Full Fadom Five
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28Stravinsky: 3 Songs from William Shakespeare: III. Spring (When Daisies Pied)
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29Anon: When that I Was but a Little Tiny Boy
Europadisc Review
Ian Bostridge’s voice has sometimes divided opinion, but this must count as one of his most successful recital discs yet. The repertoire is well chosen throughout, and his tone is perfectly matched to the repertoire, both early and late. Several famous song texts from Shakespeare’s plays reappear in multiple settings, vividly demonstrating the sheer range of styles and possibilities, including ‘Come away, death’, ‘Who is Silvia’, ‘O mistress mine’ and ‘It was a lover and his lass’. All four of these are present in Finzi’s five-song cycle Let Us Garlands Bring, which acts here as an ideal curtain-raiser, both Bostridge and Pappano proving models of sensitivity. A selection of Elizabethan and Jacobean settings follows, with Bostridge partnered by star lutenist, the ever-idiomatic Elizabeth Kenny: from Byrd and Morley to John Wilson, this is a lovely group of numbers, ranging from the delicate sprightliness to the subtle intensity (Wilson’s ‘Take, o take those lips away’).
Before moving on to more recent fare, Pappano rejoins Bostridge for two classical settings: Schubert’s ‘An Silvia’ (sung in English) and Haydn’s exquisite ‘She never told her love’, both marvellously poised. Then it’s firmly back to British shores for a selection of four songs by Roger Quilter, Ivor Gurney and Peter Warlock, with Quilter's limpid setting of ‘Come away, death’ particularly affecting. Three Korngold settings include another setting of that same text, the first of his Songs of the Clown, op.29, a strikingly Mahlerian creation that lingers long in the memory.
The ‘Fancie’ from Act 3 of The Merchant of Venice is presented side-by-side in two contrasting settings from Poulenc and Britten, the first long-breathed and lyrical, the second animated and excitable. And then, two twentieth-century masterpieces, Michael Tippett’s three Songs for Ariel – wonderfully atmospheric, the piano accompaniments delivered with a truly orchestral feeling for colour – and Stravinsky’s extraordinary Three Songs from William Shakespeare, with a starry line-up of flautist Adam Walker, clarinettist Michael Collins and violist Lawrence Power providing the ‘accompaniments’ (if one can call them that: so integral are they to the musical whole). It’s surely worth the price of the disc for the Tippett and Stravinsky alone.
How to cap all that? With the anonymous, traditional, unaccompanied version of ‘When that I was and a little tiny boy’ from Twelfth Night. It’s a magical way to end a recital of exceptional attractiveness and diversity. And it’s all enhanced still further by a fine recording and sumptuous presentation: a three-language, colourful hardback booklet with complete texts, and a magnificently erudite and detailed article by Shakespeare scholar Christopher R Wilson. Even among the plethora of issues to appear this anniversary year, this one stands tall: treat yourself!
Reviews
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