BRITTEN: Folk Song Arrangements, Vol. 2
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Benjamin Britten (1913-1976) Folk Song Arrangements 2 Benjamin Britten occupies an unrivalled position in English music of the twentieth century and a place...
Benjamin Britten (1913-1976)
Folk Song Arrangements 2
Benjamin Britten occupies an unrivalled position in
English music of the twentieth century and a place of the
greatest importance in the wider musical world. While
Elgar was in some ways part of late nineteenth-century
German romantic tradition, Britten avoided the trap
offered by musical nationalism and the insular debt to
folk-music of his older compatriots, while profiting from
that tradition in a much wider European context. He may
be seen as following in part a path mapped out by
Mahler. He possessed a special gift for word-setting and
vocal writing, a facility that Purcell had shown and that
was the foundation of a remarkable series of operas that
brought English opera for the first time into international
repertoire. Tonal in his musical language, he knew well
how to use inventively, imaginatively, and, above all,
musically, techniques that in other hands often seemed
arid. His work owed much to the friendship and constant
companionship of the singer Peter Pears, for whom
Britten wrote many of his principal operatic rôles and
whose qualities of voice and intelligence clearly had a
marked effect on his vocal writing.
Born in the East Anglian seaside town of Lowestoft
in 1913, Britten showed early gifts as a composer,
studying with Frank Bridge before a less fruitful time at
the Royal College of Music in London. His association
with the poet W.H.Auden, with whom he undertook
various collaborations, was in part behind his departure
with Pears in 1939 for the United States, where
opportunities seemed plentiful, away from the petty
jealousies and inhibitions of his own country. The
outbreak of war brought its own difficulties. Britten and
Pears were firmly pacifist in their views, but were
equally horrified at the excesses of National Socialism
and sufferings that the war brought. Britten's nostalgia
for his native country and region led to their return to
England in 1942, when they rejected the easy option of
nominal military service as musicians in uniform in
favour of overt pacifism, but were able to give concerts
and recitals, often in difficult circumstances, offering
encouragement to those who heard them. The reopening
of Sadler's Wells and the staging of Britten's
opera Peter Grimes started a new era in English opera.
The English Opera Group was founded and a series of
chamber operas followed, with larger scale works that
established Britten as a composer of the highest stature,
a position recognised shortly before his early death by
his elevation to the peerage, the first English composer
ever to be so honoured.
It was in some sense a certain nostalgia that lay
behind Britten's many folk-song arrangements. He had a
particular gift for bringing out the qualities implicit in a
melody and text, something displayed to admirable
effect in his version of The Beggar's Opera. The first set
of songs from the British Isles was published in 1943,
and further sets were published in the following years.
The last set of arrangements were made in the last
summer of Britten's life. His health had deteriorated and
a heart operation in 1973, during which he had a slight
stroke, prevented any further piano performance. In
1973 he had summoned all his strength towards the
completion of his last opera, Death in Venice, with its
perceived final great operatic rôle for Peter Pears, that of
Aschenbach. With his encouragement Pears had
collaborated with the pianist Murray Perahia in
continuing recitals, and in 1975 he wrote his fifth
canticle, The Death of St Narcissus, for Pears and the
harpist Osian Ellis.
The last Eight Folk Song Arrangements, for high
voice and harp, were also written for Peter Pears and
Osian Ellis. Lord! I married me a wife is taken from
English Folk Songs from the Southern Appalachians,
collected by Cecil Sharp. The very simple tune is set off
by the characteristic sonorities of the harp, which
punctuate the repeated opening words and the
consequences of marriage, in the words 'wife', 'life' and
'work'. She's like a swallow comes from Folk Songs
from Newfoundland, collected by Maud Karpeles, and is
presented with a flowing accompaniment, and Lemady,
taken down from a singer in Whitby, is at first given the
sparest of accompaniments, filling out in texture as the
song proceeds. The fourth song Bonny at morn, taken
from the collection Northumbrian Minstrelsie, uses
characteristic fragments of canon. It is followed by two
Welsh folk-songs, Bugeilio'r Gwenith Gwyn, the
opening words of which Osian Ellis gives in an English
singing version as I was lonely and forlorn, with its harp
arpeggio accompaniment, and Dafydd y Garreg Wen
(David of the White Rock), where Britten again finds
scope for canon. The False Knight upon the road is a
further song from Cecil Sharp's English Folk Songs
from the Southern Appalachians, edited, as before, by
Maud Karpeles. It repeats its melody and
accompaniment in its seven verses and repeated
answers. The set ends with the lively Bird Scarer's
Song, collected by Cecil Sharp in Somerset in 1904,
graphically illustrated by the harp.
Britten's unaccompanied arrangement of The Holly
and the Ivy was made in 1957 for June Gordon and the
Haddo House Choral Society. King Herod and the Cock
and The Twelve Apostles are arrangements made in 1962
for the London Boy Singers, the first dramatically
realised, and the second brought to life by its
imaginative use of the piano. The Bitter Withy, which
was left unfinished, was written for the same singers,
tenor soloist and boys' choir, also with solo voices. It is
recorded as Britten left it, breaking off in the seventh
verse.
The volume of arrangements of French songs, the
second collection, was published in 1946 and dedicated
to Britten's young friends Arnold and Humphrey Gyde,
the latter his godson, the children of the singer Sophie
Wyss, who gave the first performances of Les
Illuminations and recorded five of the French folk-song
arrangements with the composer in 1943. The
arrangements were made at Snape in 1942 and formed
part of the recital repertoire of Pears and Britten. The
orchestrated songs include a hunting-song, with the
necessary suggestions of the hunting-horns, a spinningsong,
Fileuse, with apt accompanying figuration, a
pastoral love-song, a shepherd idyll, and a sad tale from
a shepherd-boy, with a haunting refrain. Orchestral
arrangements of five of the eight songs were made by
Britten, with five of them first performed in Chicago in
1948 by the French baritone Martial Singher, the son-inlaw
of Fritz Busch, who conducted the performance with
the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. A sixth orchestration,
of La noël passee, was probably made in 1953.
Four of the songs from the first published volume of
1943 were orchestrated by the composer for a
performance given in London in December 1942 by
Peter Pears with the New London Orchestra, conducted
by Alex Sherman. These were a version of The Salley
Gardens, an Irish song, with folk-style words by
W.B.Yeats, two orchestrations of which exist from this
period, one with strings and the other with bassoon, harp
and strings, both included here. The second of the set,
Little Sir William, is a ballad, its words slightly modified
in publication to avoid the traditional anti-semitism of
the text. The poignant Scottish lament for The Bonny
Earl o' Moray is followed by a second Scottish tune, O
can ye sew cushions?, a lullaby, presumably
orchestrated during the same period. The orchestrations
from the first book end with the lively Suffolk nurseryrhyme
Oliver Cromwell. The orchestral arrangements of
The Plough Boy, O Waly, Waly and Come you not from
Newcastle, from the third published collection, were
made in the 1950s.
Keith Anderson
8 Folk Song Arrangements (more info)
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Lord! I married me a wife - 1:16
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She's like the swallow - 2:43
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Lemady - 1:26
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Bonny at morn - 3:16
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Bugeilio'r Gwenith Gwyn - 2:20
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Dafydd y Garreg Wen - 3:04
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The False Knight upon the Road - 3:40
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Bird Scarer's Song - 0:56
The Holly and the Ivy (more info)
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The Holly and the Ivy - 3:18
King Herod and the Cock (more info)
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King Herod and the Cock - 2:05
The Twelve Apostles (more info)
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The Twelve Apostles - 6:10
The Bitter Withy (more info)
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The Bitter Withy - 5:08
Le roi s’en va-t’en chasses (more info)
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Le roi s?en va-t?en chasses - 2:13
Fileuse (more info)
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Fileuse - 1:38
Eho! Eho! (more info)
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Eho! Eho! - 1:49
La belle est un jardin d’amour (more info)
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La belle est un jardin d?amour - 2:29
Quand j’etais chez mon pere (more info)
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Quand j?etais chez mon pere - 1:52
The Salley Gardens (for orchestra and voice) (more info)
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The Salley Gardens (for orchestra and voice) - 2:49
Little Sir William (more info)
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Little Sir William - 2:52
The Bonny Earl o’ Moray (more info)
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The Bonny Earl o? Moray - 2:38
O can ye sew cushions? (more info)
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O can ye sew cushions? - 2:14
Oliver Cromwell (more info)
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Oliver Cromwell - 0:40
The Plough Boy (more info)
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The Plough Boy - 1:58
O Waly, Waly (more info)
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O Waly, Waly - 3:22
Come you not from Newcastle? (more info)
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Come you not from Newcastle? - 1:11
The Salley Gardens (for strings, bassoon and voice) (more info)
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The Salley Gardens (for strings, bassoon and voice) - 2:43