Songs of War

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BRIDGE / BUTTERWORTH / SOMMERVELL / VAUGHAN WILLIAMS
Songs of War
Simon Keenlyside (baritone) & Malcolm Martineau (piano)

[ Sony Classics / CD ]

Release Date: Monday 1 October 2012

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

"One can imagine a more poignant account of the ghostly voices in 'Is my team ploughing?' but 'The lads in their hundreds' is all the more moving for Keenlyside's robustness" (Gramophone 2012 AWARD WINNER: Solo vocal)

"One can imagine a more poignant account of the ghostly voices in 'Is my team ploughing?' but 'The lads in their hundreds' is all the more moving for Keenlyside's robustness...The rest of the programme is equally rewarding and Keenlyside's diction is perfect." (Gramophone 2012 AWARD WINNER: Solo vocal)

"Keenlyside's mark is everywhere apparent and full marks to him for persuading Sony to indulge his choices...He is indeed a remarkable singer. He can encompass tragedy and irony, heroic and tender, he has magical half-tones, introduces a thrilling touch of head voice in Warlock's The Night, he can tell a story...Keenlyside's impassioned, almost overwhelming rendering of Frank Bridge's Thy Hand in Mine is, I think, the core and key to this compelling collection" (International Record Review)

"The title is deceptive, for these songs exude anything but a warlike mood. Almost all are English: the idiom is winsome, romantic and often quite innocent, as in Vaughan Williams's "Youth and Love" and Bridge's "Thy hand in mine". At the heart of the recital - beautifully vocalised and artlessly characterised by Keenlyside - is Butterworth's cycle of songs under the title "A Shropshire Lad"." (Financial Times)

"it's not damning with faint praise to say that you don't really notice the music at all - it's Simon Keenlyside's impeccable delivery that registers. Housman's bittersweet musings are heartbreaking, notably in the penultimate poem; just listen to Keenlyside's mention of "the lads that will die in their glory and never be old"...A sober, intelligent CD, beautifully sung, immaculately accompanied. Keenlyside's sleeve notes are intelligent, insightful and touching." The Arts Desk, 26th November 2011

"A sense of the mannered or precious can debase these songs; Keenlyside's sweeping, robust lyricism is deceptively effortless and exactly right...Dr Johnson once said that every man thinks worse of himself for never having been a soldier; Keenlyside has evidently thought deeply about this, making for a robust and involving recital." (BBC Music)

Tracks:

Bridge:
Thy hand in mine, H 124, for tenor and orchestra

Butterworth, G:
A Shropshire Lad - six songs
Bredon Hill and other songs

Finzi:
Fear No More The Heat O' The Sun (No. 3 from Let us garlands bring, Op. 18)

Gurney:
When death to either shall come
In Flanders

Ireland:
Sea Fever
The Vagabond
The three ravens

Rorem:
An Incident

Somervell:
Into My Heart An Air That Kills (No. 9 from A Shropshire Lad)
There Pass The Careless People (No. 3 from A Shropshire Lad)
White in the moon the long road lies (No. 7 from A Shropshire Lad)
The Street Sounds To The Soldiers' Tread (No. 5 from A Shropshire Lad)

Vaughan Williams:
Youth and Love
The infinite shining heavens
The Vagabond (from Songs of Travel)

Warlock:
The Night

Weill, K:
Beat! Beat! Drums!
Dirge For Two Veterans