Britten: Sinfonia Da Requiem / Gloriana Suite / Sea Interludes
$9.99
(COMPACT DISC)
In Stock - Usually ships within 24 hours.
Just copy this code and paste it where you want the link on your website:
Benjamin Britten (1913-1976) Sinfonia da Requiem Four Sea Interludes and Passacaglia from Peter Grimes Benjamin Britten occupies an unrivalled position in...
Benjamin Britten (1913-1976)
Sinfonia da Requiem Four Sea Interludes and Passacaglia from Peter Grimes
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, where
musical facility and genius often seemed the objects of
suspicion. 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 re-opening 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.
The earliest of the works here included is the
Sinfonia da Requiem, written in response to a
commission in the autumn of 1939 from the Japanese
government for a work to mark the 2,600th anniversary
of the founding of the imperial dynasty. The occasion
was to include new compositions by Richard Strauss,
Jacques Ibert and Sandor Veress, but Britten's
symphony was rejected by the commissioning
committee, who took exception to the nature of the work
and its apparent Christian content, although it had
initially received approval. Britten had, in any case,
resolved to write a composition imbued with as much of
the spirit of pacifism as was possible. The official
concert duly took place in Tokyo, with Britain
unrepresented, and Strauss at his most bombastic. In the
event the Sinfonia da Requiem, dedicated to the memory
of Britten's parents, had its first performance in March
1941 at Carnegie Hall in New York, with the
Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra conducted by John
Barbirolli.
Britten, in his programme notes for the first
performance, described the opening movement,
Lacrymosa, as a slow marching lament with three
principal motifs, the first heard from the cellos answered
by a solo bassoon, the second based on the interval of a
major seventh and the third alternating chords on flute
and trombones. The first section leads to an extended
crescendo and a climax based on the first motif. The
second movement, Dies Irae, which follows without a
break, he describes as a Dance of Death. It leads directly
to the final Requiem Aeternam, with its principal melody
announced by the flutes, finally returning before the
sustained clarinet note with which the work ends.
Peter Grimes had its first performance at the reopened
Sadler's Wells Theatre in London in June 1945.
In California in 1941 Britten had come across an article
by E.M.Forster on the poet George Crabbe, adding to his
own feelings of nostalgia for his own part of England.
Crabbe's poem The Borough, set in Suffolk, provided a
source for the opera. The fisherman Peter Grimes, an
outsider, suspected by his fellow-townspeople of cruelty
to his apprentices, is hounded to his death. The drama,
and the death of Grimes's last apprentice, the result of
the actions of the people of the borough, is set against
the sea in its varying moods, elements familiar to Britten
from his childhood by the sea in Lowestoft. The Four
Sea Interludes divide the scenes of the opera. The first
of these, Dawn, with its sea-gull cries above the waves,
introduces the first act, as fisherfolk mend their nets and
prepare their sails for the day to come. The second of the
four, Sunday Morning, introduces Act II, with its church
bells and bright sunshine, as townspeople gather before
church, their self-righteous hypocrisy in contrast to the
genuine emotions that will be played out between
Grimes and the schoolmistress Ellen Orford, who tries to
protect him. Moonlight begins the third act, the shore
and village street lit by the moon, as a dance takes place
in the Moot Hall, a scene in which the hypocritical
character of those who condemn Grimes becomes ever
more apparent. Storm is taken from earlier in the opera,
between the first and second scenes. Balstrode, a
fisherman, gives Grimes friendly advice, urging him to
marry Ellen, this against the sounds of a rising storm. In
what follows people gather in The Boar Inn, where
Grimes's arrival, either mad or drunk the people say, is
unwelcome. The Passacaglia comes at a moment of
dramatic climax, between the first and second scenes of
Act II. In the first scene the people, incited to revenge on
Grimes for his maltreatment of his new apprentice, set
out towards his hut; in the second Grimes, ambitious to
make money, the only thing others respect, urges his
apprentice down the cliff to set out fishing, as the people
of the borough make their threatening approach. The
Passacaglia theme itself echoes Grimes's own words,
after his quarrel with Ellen, 'God have mercy upon me',
while the solo viola of the first variation speaks for the
mute apprentice.
Gloriana was written, as the result of conversations
between Britten, Peter Pears and his friends Lord and
Lady Harewood, for the coronation of 1953, with a
libretto by William Plomer, and a plot taken largely
from Lytton Strachey's Elizabeth and Essex. Like Billy
Budd, which had been staged at Covent Garden in
connection with the 1951 Festival of Britain, it deals
with conflict between personal feelings and duty, as
Queen Elizabeth has no choice but to condemn her
impetuous young favourite, the Earl of Essex, to death.
It is hardly necessary to repeat stories about the first
night, a royal gala performance before an
uncomprehending audience, described by a leading
member of the cast as 'cold fish'. Possibly the jingoism
that Britten had openly avoided in the Sinfonia da
Requiem would have better suited the occasion. Here,
however, was a serious opera, that, nevertheless, had its
elements of royal courtly pageantry.
Britten arranged the Symphonic Suite from the opera
in the later months of 1954, with the help of Imogen
Holst. It opens with The Tournament of Act I, where
Essex, jealous of the success of Mountjoy in combat,
fights with him. The Lute Song, reflecting the idiom of
Dowland, is given, in the suite, to a solo oboe,
accompanied by the harp, in the opera the second lute
song sung by Essex to the Queen in the second scene.
The Courtly Dances are taken from Act II, where
courtiers dance in the Palace of Whitehall, a scene in
which Essex seems deliberately to provoke the Queen,
leading to the humiliation of his wife. Gloriana
Moritura is based on the end of the opera, where the
Queen faces her own death.
Keith Anderson
Symphonic Suite, Op. 53a, "Gloriana" (more info)
-
The Tournament - 4:36
-
The Lute Song - 5:13
-
Courtly Dance No. 1: March - 0:52
-
Courtly Dance No. 2: Coranto - 1:22
-
Courtly Dance No. 3: Pavane - 2:45
-
Courtly Dance No. 4: Morris Dance - 1:05
-
Courtly Dance No. 5: Galliard - 2:00
-
Courtly Dance No. 6: Lavolta - 1:25
-
Courtly Dance No. 7: March - 0:57
-
Gloriana Moritura - 6:51
4 Sea Interludes, Op. 33a (more info)
-
I. Dawn - 4:00
-
II. Sunday Morning - 3:59
-
III. Moonlight - 4:26
-
IV. Storm - 4:25
Passacaglia, Op. 33b (more info)
-
Passacaglia, Op. 33b - 7:38
Sinfonia da Requiem, Op. 20 (more info)
-
I. Lacrymosa - 8:46
-
II. Dies Irae - 5:23
-
III. Requiem Aeternam - 6:08