BRITTEN: Serenade, Op. 31 / Nocturne, Op. 60 / Phaedra, Op. 93
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Benjamin Britten (1913-1976): Orchestral Song-Cycles 2 Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings Nocturne Phaedra The medium of the orchestral song-cycle is one...
Benjamin Britten (1913-1976): Orchestral Song-Cycles 2
Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings Nocturne Phaedra
The medium of the orchestral song-cycle is one that
much attracted Britten. His concept of an anthology of
sometimes diverse texts, unified by a common literary
or poetic theme was a favourite device to which he
returned several times. The present recording features
his two later and arguably best-known works in the
genre, together with a major vocal work dating from
the very last years of the composer's life.
Britten's return from his three-year sojourn in
America in 1942 represented a homecoming that was
more than purely geographical. As is well-known, it
was his reading an article by E.M. Forster about the
poet George Crabbe in an edition of The Listener that
made Britten homesick for his native Suffolk and
prompted his subsequent return to England with the
idea for a new opera, Peter Grimes, uppermost in his
mind. As if in preparation for the task ahead, Britten
undertook the composition of a number of vocal and
choral works including A Ceremony of Carols, the
Hymn to St Cecilia, Rejoice in the Lamb and, perhaps
most important of all, the Serenade for tenor, horn and
strings, Op. 31, composed during March and April
1943. In the summer of the previous year, Britten had
become acquainted with the remarkable young hornplayer
Dennis Brain (1921-1957) who during the war
was playing in the R.A.F. Central Band, for which
Britten was writing incidental music for a series of
wartime radio documentaries. It was not long before
Brain asked Britten for a work especially for him and
the idea for the Serenade was born. The first
performance took place on 15th October 1943 at the
Wigmore Hall in London with Brain and Peter Pears as
soloists and Walter Goehr conducting. In a letter to his
friend Elizabeth Mayer, Britten characterized the
Serenade as 'not important stuff, but quite pleasant I
think', a surprisingly modest way of describing what is
widely regarded to be one of the finest and most
characteristic of all his works. The cycle is dedicated to
Edward Sackville-West, a writer friend of Britten's
who had helped with the choice of texts.
The Serenade opens with a Prologue for solo horn
played on the instrument's natural harmonics (causing
some notes to sound deliberately out-of-tune), evoking
an atmosphere of 'natural', primeval innocence. This
mood is sustained in the twilit landscape of Cotton's
Pastoral with its gently descending arpeggio figures in
the voice and horn, and the more vigorous setting of
Tennyson's Nocturne, notable for its cadenza-like
fanfare passages ('Blow, bugle, blow') with their
highly characteristic chains of thirds. The relatively
uncomplicated nature of these first two settings makes
the contrast with the third, Blake's Elegy, all the more
effective: this is one of Britten's most overt and
explicit representations of, as Edward Sackville-West
put it, 'the sense of sin in the heart of man'. The quietly
heaving syncopations in the strings and plodding
double bass arpeggios are straight-forwardly diatonic
but are disturbed by the chromatically meandering horn
line which proceeds by way of falling semi-tones, often
effecting a flattening from major to minor, intensified
in the closing bars by the eerie use of hand-stopped
glissandi. The following Dirge maintains the dark tone,
the tenor's obsessively repeated ground oblivious to
the developing fugue in the strings which begins
pianissimo, gradually building to a powerful climax
(marked by the horn's dramatic entry with the fugue
subject), before retreating back into the shadows. The
tension is dispelled by the following fleet-footed
setting of Ben Jonson's Hymn to Diana in which the
strings play pizzicato throughout. The final song,
Keats's Sonnet, in which the horn is silent, is an
Adagio of rare beauty which gains its highly distinctive
sound from the juxtaposition of unrelated triads, a
prime example of Britten's genius for discovering
fresh uses for the most basic musical elements. Finally
the horn closes the cycle with the Epilogue, an exact
repeat of the Prologue with which it began the work,
but this time played offstage, the innocence of the
opening now left far behind.
The Nocturne, Op. 60, composed in 1958 and first
performed at that year's Leeds Centenary Festival, is in
many respects a successor to the Serenade. As with the
earlier work, the texts have the theme of night, sleep
and dreams in common, but there are some important
differences: in contrast to the single obbligato horn
employed in the Serenade, Britten here uses seven
different solo instruments, each of which lends its own
distinctive colour to each setting, and whereas the
Serenade had consisted of a sequence of separate, selfcontained
songs, however unified overall, the Nocturne
is completely through-composed, connected by means
of a recurring ritornello figure in the strings, its gently
rocking motion no doubt meant to represent the
breathing sleeper (this idea actually derives from a
song originally intended for the Serenade, 'Now sleeps
the crimson petal', which was never used). The
harmonic language too is less tonally stable and more
ambiguous, making particular use of the juxtaposition
of two keys a semi-tone apart, C and D flat. Britten
dedicated the work to Alma Mahler, in doing so
acknowledging the debt he himself owed to Gustav
Mahler.
The strings alone accompany the lullaby-like first
song, Shelley's On a poet's lips I slept, dominated by
the sleeping motif mentioned above. This cross-fades
into the second, Tennyson's The Kraken, the great seamonster
suggested by the wide-ranging popping and
writhing of the solo bassoon. The harp is used to
characterise Coleridge's delicate moonlit reverie of the
'lovely boy plucking fruits', its pure, untroubled A
major (Britten's usual key for symbolizing innocence
and beauty) only mildly disrupted in the final line,
'Has he no friend, no loving mother near?' The horn
supplies onomatopoeic nocturnal sounds for
Middleton's 'midnight bell' with varied use of muting,
hand-stopping and flutter-tongue. As in the Serenade,
the two central settings focus on the more sinister
aspects of night and darkness: the lines taken from
Wordsworth's The Prelude are coloured by the
timpani, their ominous rumbling driving the music to
an anguished climax which, after a rapid diminuendo,
is followed by a setting of Wilfred Owen's The Kind
Ghosts (anticipating Britten's use of this poet's verse
in the War Requiem), a funeral march featuring a
plaintive lament from the cor anglais supported by the
strings' mournful pizzicato tread. In complete contrast,
the setting of Keats's Sleep and Poetry is the lightest
setting in the work with an airy dialogue between flute
and clarinet. This culminates in a return of the
ritornello which in turn leads into the climactic final
song, a richly expressive, highly Mahlerian setting of
Shakespeare's Sonnet 43, 'When most I wink' in which
all the instruments used hitherto are combined.
Phaedra Op. 93, Britten's last major vocal work,
was composed during the summer of 1975. In 1970,
Britten had written the part of Kate Julian in the opera
Owen Wingrave specifically with the mezzo-soprano
Janet Baker in mind and had also conducted and
recorded The Rape of Lucretia with her in the title-rôle.
It was apparently her performance of Berlioz's Nuits
d'ete at the 1975 Aldeburgh Festival, however, that
inspired Britten to write this 'dramatic cantata for
mezzo-soprano and small orchestra' especially for her
voice. The work received its première on 16th June
1976 at Aldeburgh with Baker as soloist under the
direction of Steuart Bedford.
The text is taken from Robert Lowell's English
verse translation of Racine's Phèdre. On the day of her
marriage to Theseus, Phaedra sees her husband's son
Hippolytus with whom she immediately becomes
infatuated. When she is rejected by the youth, in guilt
and shame she decides to end her life by poisoning.
This subject of forbidden love is, of course, a favourite
Britten theme and it resulted in one of the most
passionate and emotionally involved of his later scores.
Britten's model was the Baroque solo cantata (even
down to the use of cello and harpsichord for the
recitative passages), but it is perhaps more helpful to
think of Phaedra as an extended operatic scena. The
work falls into five clearly defined sections. The
luminous string textures of the Prologue, depicting the
brilliant Athenian sunshine on Phaedra's wedding day,
are based on a theme of descending perfect fifths that
will recur at important moments during the work. This
is followed by a recitative in which Phaedra, at first
determined to fight her obsession, realises that
resistance is futile and abandons herself to her passion,
the whirling string figuration of the agitated Presto that
follows graphically representing her confused, frenzied
state of mind. This is contrasted with a slower moving,
statelier passage (marked 'ironically') based on the
fifths from the opening, 'Phaedra in all her madness
stands before you', one of the score's most memorable
moments. In the second recitative, Phaedra resolves to
take her own life, the following Adagio portraying her
death in sonorous string harmonies that increasingly
acquire an air of stoic nobility. The main motives of the
work are then fleetingly recapitulated before the work
ends with a final reminder of the fifths, this time in
ascending form, as if evaporating into thin air.
Lloyd Moore
Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings, Op. 31 (more info)
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Prologue - 1:23
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Pastoral - 3:14
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Nocturne - 3:36
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Elegy - 4:09
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Dirge - 3:21
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Hymn - 1:58
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Sonnet - 3:44
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Epilogue (off stage) - 1:32
Nocturne, Op. 60 (more info)
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On a poet's lips I slept - 3:18
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Below the thunders of the upper deep - 2:56
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Encintured with a twine of leaves - 2:49
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Midnight's bell goes ting, ting, ting, ting - 2:31
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But that night when on my bed I lay - 2:56
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She sleeps on soft, last breaths; but no ghost looms - 4:09
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What is more gentle than a wind in summer? - 3:41
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When most I wink, then do mine eyes best see - 4:15
Phaedra, Op. 93 (more info)
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Prologue - In May, in brilliant Athens - 1:32
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My lost and dazzled eyes - 1:02
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Venus resigned her altar to my new Lord - 0:43
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Phaedra in all her madness stands before you - 1:42
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The wife of Theseus loves Hippolytus - 1:28
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Oh Gods of wrath - 2:26
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Death to the unhappy's no catastrophe - 1:46
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My time's too short, your highness - 1:42
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Chills already dart along my boiling veins - 2:38