Stanford - Songs of Faith, Love and Nonsense
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Label: Somm
Cat No: SOMMCD0627
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Vocal/Choral
Release Date: 22nd January 2021
Contents
Works
Nonsense RhymesSongs (3) of Robert Bridges, op.43
Songs (4) from Shamus O'Brien, op.61
Songs of Faith, op.97
The Triumph of Love, op.82
Artists
Roderick Williams (baritone)James Way (tenor)
Andrew West (piano)
Works
Nonsense RhymesSongs (3) of Robert Bridges, op.43
Songs (4) from Shamus O'Brien, op.61
Songs of Faith, op.97
The Triumph of Love, op.82
Artists
Roderick Williams (baritone)James Way (tenor)
Andrew West (piano)
About
Songs of Love, Faith and Nonsense continues SOMM’s widely acclaimed commitment to Stanford’s music with baritone Roderick Williams, tenor James Way (making his SOMM debut) and pianist Andrew West throwing revealing new light on his gift for word setting and the variety of his responses to matters of emotional ardour, spiritual fervency and the sublime nonsense poems of Edward Lear.
Setting poems by Tennyson and Walt Whitman, Songs of Faith demonstrates Stanford’s ability to give unique expression to the profound and the arcane with music of dramatic force and harmonic ingenuity. Three songs by Robert Bridges (librettist for Stanford’s oratorio Eden) and four songs from the opera Shamus O’Brien tap into Stanford’s Irish roots to colourful and evocative effect.
Composed to mark his 25th wedding anniversary and receiving its first recording, The Triumph of Love sets five sonnets by his close cousin, Edmond Gore Alexander Holmes, in richly executed settings.
The delightful Nonsense Rhymes taken from Edward Lear’s inimitably playful, poignant and pointed limericks show a different side to Stanford, a “highly articulate, dry humour like many literary Irishmen of his era”, as Jeremy Dibble says in his authoritative booklet notes.
SOMM’s previous Stanford recordings include the recently released String Quintets (SOMMCD0623) and the complete, three-volume String Quartets (SOMMCD0160, 0185, 0607) with the Dante Quartet praised by Gramophone for their “ardent, alert and thoroughly lived-in performances”, and Partsongs with the Birmingham Conservatoire Chamber Choir and Paul Spicer (SOMMCD0128) which Limelight described as “excellent… beautifully sung”.
SOMM’s world premiere recording of The Travelling Companion (SOMMCD2742) was hailed “a landmark” by Gramophone.
Sound/Video
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1Songs of Faith, op.97 (1907): 1. Strong son of God, immortal Love
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2Songs of Faith, op.97 (1907): 2. God and the universe
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3Songs of Faith, op.97 (1907): 3. Faith
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4Songs of Faith, op.97 (1907): 4. To the Soul
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5Songs of Faith, op.97 (1907): 5. Tears
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6Songs of Faith, op.97 (1907): 6. Joy, Shipmate, Joy!
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7Three Songs of Robert Bridges, op.43 (1891): 1. Since thou, O fondest and truest
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8Three Songs of Robert Bridges, op.43 (1891): 2. I praise the tender flower
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9Three Songs of Robert Bridges, op.43 (1891): 3. Say, O say! saith the music
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10Four Songs from ‘Shamus O’Brien’, op.61 (1896): 1. My heart is thrall to Kitty’s beauty
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11Four Songs from ‘Shamus O’Brien’, op.61 (1896): 2. Glengall
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12Four Songs from ‘Shamus O’Brien’, op.61 (1896): 3. Ochone, when I used to be young!
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13Four Songs from ‘Shamus O’Brien’, op.61 (1896): 4. I love my ould Ireland
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14Nonsense Rhymes, op. posth.: 1. The Hardy Norsewoman, op.365
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15Nonsense Rhymes, op. posth.: 2. The Compleat Virtuoso, op.366
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16Nonsense Rhymes, op. posth.: 3. The Absent Barber, op.367
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17Nonsense Rhymes, op. posth.: 4. The Cow and the Coward, op.368
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18Nonsense Rhymes, op. posth.: 5. Barkerolle, op.369
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19Nonsense Rhymes, op. posth.: 6. Dithyramb, op.370
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20Nonsense Rhymes, op. posth.: 7. The Generous Parishioner, op.371
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21Nonsense Rhymes, op. posth.: 8. Limmerich ohne Worte, op.372
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22Nonsense Rhymes, op. posth.: 9. The Boat Song, op.373
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23Nonsense Rhymes, op. posth.: 10. Nileinsamkeit, op.374
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24Nonsense Rhymes, op. posth.: 11. The Aquiline Snub, op.375
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25Nonsense Rhymes, op. posth.: 12. Tone Poem, op.376
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26Nonsense Rhymes, op. posth.: 13. Gongdichtung, op.377
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27Nonsense Rhymes, op. posth.: 14. A Visit of Elizabeth, op.378
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28The Triumph of Love, op.82 (1903): 1. O one deep sacred outlet of my soul
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29The Triumph of Love, op.82 (1903): 2. Like as the thrush in winter
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30The Triumph of Love, op.82 (1903): 3. When the solemn stillness of the night
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31The Triumph of Love, op.82 (1903): 4. I think that we were children
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32The Triumph of Love, op.82 (1903): 5. O flames of passion
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33Nonsense Rhymes, op. posth.: 5a Barkerolle, op.369 (alternative version)
Europadisc Review
Any recording that features baritone Roderick Williams deserves serious attention, and here he joins forces with tenor James Way and pianist Adam West for a sensitive and spirited survey of songs of ‘Faith, Love and Nonsense’. Like many of his Irish compatriots, Stanford had a keen feeling for words and this, combined with a sure sense of musicality honed by his studies in Leipzig and a lifelong enthusiasm for the music of Mendelssohn, Schumann and Brahms, ensures that each of the small cycles presented here has much to offer both performers and listeners.
Williams opens the disc with the Songs of Faith (1907), comprising six songs, the first set of three to texts by Tennyson, the second set by Walt Whitman. The first song, ‘Strong son of God’, outlines an ambitious canvas with its dramatic opening and inexorable harmonic progressions, while ‘God and the universe’ and ‘Faith’ (both texts taken from The Death of Oenone) plumb greater depths, the introspective former in particular benefiting from Williams’s unfailing responsiveness to the lyrics, while West’s dedicated accompaniment comes into its own in the sparkling music at the words ‘comes a gleam of what is higher’. The Whitman settings are, if anything, even finer, with Stanford inspired to uncharacteristically adventurous chromatic harmonies in ‘To the Soul’ and ‘Tears’. In the final song the metaphor of a sea voyage clearly appealed to Stanford’s penchant for maritime evocation.
In the Three Songs of Robert Bridges (1891), love is the theme, and there is a distinctive Irish folk flavour to the opening number, while ‘I praise the tender flower’ and ‘Say, o say! saith the music’ are performed with exquisite beauty by Williams and West, revealing Stanford as a song composer of enormous nuance in the high Romantic vein.
During his lifetime, Stanford scored several successes as a composer of operas, and one of the most enduring was the romantic comedy Shamus O’Brien, the story of a hero pursued by the British authorities in the wake of the 1798 Irish Rebellion. In the four songs excerpted from the opera, James Way takes the part of Captain Trevor, a British soldier in love with Shamus’s sister-in-law Kitty, a classic lyric tenor role; he then shares the role of the antagonist, the treacherous Mike Murphy, with Williams, singing the mercenary ‘Glengall’ while Williams takes the briskly nostalgic ‘Ochone! When I used to be young’. The set closes with the hero’s monologue ‘I love my ould Ireland’, sung as he is brought to the gallows, and delivered by Williams with suitable defiance. It’s all enough to suggest that the opera itself would be well worth a revival and even a complete recording.
James Way has one cycle to himself, The Triumph of Love (1903), which sets five sonnets by Stanford’s cousin Edmond Holmes, wordily effusive affairs which nevertheless benefit from Stanford’s sure-footed settings, the odd-numbered items serving as robust pillars to the more gently mellifluous ‘Like as the thrush’ and ‘I think that we are children’, in which Way’s light-toned voice is at its finest. The whole cycle, however, he invests with a welcome passion, redeeming Holmes’s verbosity with the aid of Stanford’s gracious vocal lines and nicely-judged accompaniments.
From the accounts of those who knew him best, it’s clear that Stanford had a dry and impish sense of humour, and this is abundantly evident in his settings of 13 of Edward Lear’s Nonsense Rhymes, discovered by publishers Stanford & Bell in bomb-damaged archives and belatedly published in 1960. These are light-hearted settings which were performed by Stanford himself at the social gatherings he hosted in Kensington for friends and students. They overflow with knowing musical quotations, usually apposite to Lear’s texts, sometimes affectionate (Mendelssohn, Beethoven, Handel and Brahms), at others pointedly satirical (Richard Strauss and Wagner being the main targets). All three performers clearly enjoy themselves, and listeners will have fun spotting the various musical works that are referenced. Our favourite? The Mendelssohn and Beethoven Violin Concertos entwined in ‘The Compleat Virtuoso’ (‘There was an Old Man of the Isles’).
A fine recording from the Wyastone Concert Hall, and expert notes from Stanford authority Jeremy Dibble, ensure that this all adds up to a disc to savour, and not just for fans of the composer. The performances are committed and communicative in equal measure, and with many first recordings this is a significant addition to the catalogue.
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