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Tracklista: 1. Hymn to St. Cecilia, for chorus, Op. 27  - Benjamin Britten  -  Choir of King's College, Cambridge  - John 2. Minnion  - Christopher Robinson Sea Interludes (4) from Peter Grimes, for orchestra, Op. 33a  - Benjamin Britten  - Steuart Bedford  -  London Symphony Orchestra  - John Minnion 3. Rejoice in the Lamb, festival cantata for trumpet, ATB soloists, chorus & organ, Op. 30: 1. Rejoice on God, O ye Tongues  - Benjamin Britten  -  Choir of King's College, Cambridge  - John Minnion  - Christopher Robinson 4. Sinfonia da Requiem, for orchestra, Op. 20: 1. Lacrymosa  - Benjamin Britten  - Steuart Bedford  -  London Symphony Orchestra  - John Minnion 5. Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra (Variations and Fugue on a Theme of Purcell), for speaker ad lib & orchestra, Op. 34: Theme  - Benjamin Britten  - Steuart Bedford  -  London Symphony Orchestra  - John Minnion 6. Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra (Variations and Fugue on a Theme of Purcell), for speaker ad lib & orchestra, Op. 34: Fugue  - Benjamin Britten  - Steuart Bedford  -  London Symphony Orchestra  - John Minnion 7. Serenade, for tenor, horn & strings, Op. 31: 4. Elegy  - Benjamin Britten  - Steuart Bedford  -  English Chamber Orchestra  - Philip Langridge  - Frank Lloyd  - John Minnion 8. Gloriana, symphonic suite for tenor (or oboe) & orchestra, Op. 53a: 10. Gloriana Moritura  - Benjamin Britten  - Steuart Bedford  -  London Symphony Orchestra  - John Minnion 9. Simple Symphony, for string orchestra, Op. 4: 2. Playful Pizzicato  - Benjamin Britten  - Steuart Bedford  - John Minnion  -  Northern Sinfonia Chorus 10. Suite on English folk tunes (A time there was), for orchestra, Op. 90: A time there was... 1. Cakes and Ale  - Benjamin Britten  - Steuart Bedford  - John Minnion  -  Northern Sinfonia Chorus 11. Variations on a Theme by Frank Bridge, for strings, Op. 10: Variation 10. Fugue and Finale  - Benjamin Britten  - Steuart Bedford  -  English Chamber Orchestra  - John Minnion 12. Tell me the Truth about Love, for voice & piano (Cabaret Songs)  - Benjamin Britten  - Steuart Bedford  - Della Jones  - John Minnion 13. War Requiem, for soprano, tenor, baritone, boys' voices, chorus, chamber orchestra, orchestra & organ, Op. 66: Requiem aeternam  - Benjamin Britten  - Martyn Brabbins  - John Minnion  - Thomas Randle  - Lynda Russell  - Michael Volle  -  Scottish Festival Chorus  -  BBC Scottish Chamber Orchestra 14. A Hymn to the Virgin, for double chorus  - Benjamin Britten  -  Choir of King's College, Cambridge  - John Minnion  - Christopher Robinson


  • Wykonawca Various Artists
  • Data premiery 2008-06-12
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista:1. Shostakovich - sonata for cello and piano D minor - Allegro non troppo 11:152. Shostakovich - sonata for cello and piano D minor - Allegro 3:053. Shostakovich - sonata for cello and piano D minor - Largo 8:244. Shostakovich - sonata for cello and piano D minor - Allegro 4:135. Prokofiev - sonata for cello and piano C major - Andante grave 10:366. Prokofiev - sonata for cello and piano C major - Moderato 4:587. Prokofiev - sonata for cello and piano C major - Allegro ma non troppo 8:228. Britten Sonata for cello and piano C major - Dialogo 5:539. Britten Sonata for cello and piano C major - Scherzo 2:2710. Britten Sonata for cello and piano C major - Elegia 5:2511. Britten Sonata for cello and piano C major - Marcia 2:1612. Britten Sonata for cello and piano C major - Moto perpetuo 2:29


  • Wykonawca Wispelwey Pieter
  • Data premiery 2014-12-04
  • Nośnik CD

Tracklista:1. Britten: Sacred and Profane: St. Godric's Hymn2. Britten: Sacred and Profane: I mon waxe wod3. Britten: Sacred and Profane: Lenten is come4. Britten: Sacred and Profane: The long night5. Britten: Sacred and Profane: Yif ic of luve can6. Britten: Sacred and Profane: Carol7. Britten: Sacred and Profane: Ye that pasen by8. Britten: Sacred and Profane: A death9. Elgar: Part-Songs: Go, song of mine, op. 5710. Elgar: Part-Songs: There is sweet music, op. 53 no. 111. Elgar: Part-Songs: Love's Tempest, op. 73 no. 112. Williams: Three Shakespeare Songs: Full Fathom Five13. Williams: Three Shakespeare Songs: The Cloud-Capp'd Towers14. Williams: Three Shakespeare Songs: Over Hill. Over Dale15. Britten: Hymn To St. Cecilia, op. 2716. Delius: Two Unaccompanied Part Songs: Slow but not dragging17. Delius: Two Unaccompanied Part Songs: Gaily but not quick18. Stanford: The Blue Bird, op. 119 no. 3


  • Wykonawca RIAS Kammerchor
  • Data premiery 2014-12-04
  • Nośnik CD
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On a new disc to celebrate the 2012 Diamond Jubilee, The King's Singers present a selection of works from the past 500 years written in honour of the great Monarchs of Britain.   Starting with works for (and in some cases by) Henry VIII, the programme covers the Elizabethan 'Triumphs of Oriana' by composers such as Gibbons, Mundy and Dowland; a very Victorian selection of dedicatory works by Elgar, Parry and Parratt; choral arrangements from the opera 'Glorianna' by Benjamin Britten; and a new piece by Paul Drayton that comically pens 'A Rough Guide to the Royal Succession'. Drayton is perhaps best known to fans of The King's Singers as the composer of their much-loved encore work Masterpiece.


  • Wykonawca The King's Singers
  • Data premiery 2012-06-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Although Britten is particularly celebrated for the substantial body of music he composed for the tenor voice—almost all of it directly inspired by the artistry of his long-term partner and creative muse, Peter Pears—the composer also left an important legacy of music for baritone. Characteristically, Britten’s output for low voice was also inspired by the talents of specific performers with whom he was closely associated, among them Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, John Shirley-Quirk, Owen Brannigan and Benjamin Luxon. In addition to song-cycles, individual songs and folksong arrangements, Britten wrote challenging baritone roles in operas as diverse as Billy Budd (1951), Owen Wingrave (1970) and Death in Venice (1972)—the title role of the second of these made very much Gerald Finley’s own in his magnificent interpretation in Margaret Williams’s 2001 television film of the opera. Even when Britten was writing for other singers, however, Pears’s influence remained apparent in the composer’s choice of texts for musical setting, which often reflected the tenor’s literary tastes as well as Britten’s own.The many poems set to music by Britten when he was a prolific schoolboy composer date from long before he met Pears, and the composer’s literary choices were at that early stage fairly conservative. Britten’s favourite poet during his youth was Walter de la Mare, and in 1968 the mature composer assembled a set of five of his juvenile settings of de la Mare’s poetry under the title Tit for Tat, which was given its first performance by John Shirley-Quirk and the composer at the Aldeburgh Festival in 1969. In his programme note written for the occasion, Britten commented that he had made his selection from songs composed between the ages of fourteen and seventeen; he said that he had ‘cleaned them very slightly, and here at this first performance, offer them in gratitude to the poet’s son, the wise and encouraging chairman of my new publishers, whose father’s poems have meant so much to me all through my life.’ (The reference was to Richard de la Mare, who was celebrating his seventieth birthday in that year, and who had become Chairman of Faber Music in 1966, having previously served as Chairman of the parent company Faber & Faber.) Britten’s punctilious attention to detail in his manuscripts meant that all the songs could be dated fairly precisely: ‘A Song of Enchantment’ was composed in January 1929, ‘Autumn’ (originally accompanied by string quartet) on 28 January 1931, ‘Silver’ on 13 June 1928, ‘Vigil’ on 23 December 1930, and the concluding title song in the first two weeks of 1929. In his preface to the published score, Britten noted that ‘oddly enough, the inadequacies seemed to be more striking in the later songs—new musical styles had appeared on the composer’s horizon too recently to be assimilated … At any rate, although I hold no claims whatever for the songs’ importance or originality, I do feel that the boy’s vision has a simplicity and clarity which might have given a little pleasure to the great poet, with his unique insight into a child’s mind.’Four years before Shirley-Quirk gave the premiere of Tit for Tat, the Aldeburgh Festival had also been the venue for a more substantial and challenging baritone cycle, the Songs and Proverbs of William Blake. Britten’s close association with the legendary German baritone Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau began in the early 1960s, and the baritone parts in Britten’s War Requiem (1962) and Cantata Misericordium (1963) had been written specifically for him to sing. Shortly afterwards the composer embarked on the composition of a solo song-cycle designed to showcase Fischer-Dieskau’s unique blend of intense lyricism and dramatic characterization, and Britten turned for inspiration to the vivid and sometimes visionary poetry of William Blake. Britten’s working title for the cycle—which was based on fourteen short but striking Blake texts selected by Pears—was Songs and Sentences of William Blake. The score was completed on 6 April 1965, the manuscript inscribed with the words ‘For Dieter: the past and the future’. The work, under its slightly revised title, was first performed by its dedicatee and composer at Aldeburgh’s Parish Church on 24 June 1965, and six months later the two men recorded their powerful interpretation for Decca at Kingsway Hall, London.Britten’s Blake cycle returns in places to the dark intensity of his much earlier Blake setting, ‘The Sick Rose’ (‘Elegy’) from the Serenade for tenor, horn and strings of 1943. Both the fully chromatic melody and striking image of cankerous corruption in the earlier song look directly ahead to the Songs and Proverbs—which are based on texts drawn from Blake’s Songs of Experience (1794), in which ‘The Sick Rose’ is also to be found. With the addition of one poem from the Songs of Innocence (1789) and several epigrams from the undated Proverbs of Hell, Britten created a continuous structure in which the Proverbs are set to recurrent but constantly reworked ritornello material, a structural plan familiar from other Britten works of the late 1950s and early 1960s (principally the orchestral song-cycle Nocturne, the opera A Midsummer Night’s Dream and the Cantata Misericordium). These stark Proverbs are clearly distinguished from the songs they punctuate by their disconcerting lack of metrical synchronization between voice and piano—a feature retained from the Church Parable Curlew River, composed in the previous year—and they also make limited use of twelve-note techniques.As so often in Britten’s later music, the tension between luminous diatonicism and elusive chromaticism is exploited throughout the cycle as a potent symbol for the conflict between innocence and experience at the heart of Blake’s poetry. The settings of ‘London’ and ‘Every Night and every Morn’ that frame the cycle are closely related in their ambiguous and subtly disturbing chromaticism, while greater tonal simplicity is reserved for natural scenes: the bright glow of ‘The Tyger’ and the lament for ‘The Fly’. Moments of tremendous rhetorical power are strategically located in ‘A Poison Tree’ and ‘Ah, Sun-flower’. ‘A Poison Tree’ features a highly original use of simple major and minor triads within a context of chromatic saturation. The young Britten had previously set this same Blake text to music on 2 March 1935; the earlier song remained unperformed until 1986, and is also included in the present recording. As in the opera The Turn of the Screw (1954), the intense chromaticism of the mature treatment of this gripping text serves as a graphic symbol of cankerous evil, and forms the utterly chilling core of the cycle.The last of Britten’s many published sets of folksong arrangements was prepared in the summer of 1976, shortly before his death, and featured harp rather than piano accompaniment since the composer had for some time been too ill to accompany Pears in public. The harpist Osian Ellis had accordingly become one of Pears’s regular accompanists, and the 1976 folksongs were designed to serve (as had Britten’s earlier folksong settings with piano) as popular encore items for the duo. ‘She’s like the swallow’ and ‘Bird Scarer’s Song’ were first performed in this capacity at the Aldeburgh Festival on 17 June 1976, and ‘Lemady’ was first performed at the University of Chicago on 10 November 1977. ‘David of the White Rock’ (‘Dafydd y Garreg Wen’) was a tribute to Ellis’s Welsh ancestry. The Eight Folksong Arrangements of which these songs formed part were published posthumously in two distinct editions in 1980, the original with harp accompaniment and an alternative version with piano accompaniment prepared by the composer’s music assistant Colin Matthews.The other songs on the present disc also received exposure and publication only after the composer’s death in December 1976. Several date from the early 1940s when Britten and Pears were beginning to make their names in the USA as a recital duo: these include the setting of ‘Greensleeves’ and ‘The Crocodile’, the latter performed on 14 December 1941 at a concert given under the Auspices of the American Women’s Hospitals Reserve Corps at Southold High School in upstate New York, as part of a programme that also included Charles Dibdin’s ‘Tom Bowling’ (1789)—a song of which Britten later prepared his own realization, launched at the Aldeburgh Festival in 1959 and recorded by Pears in the same year. ‘I wonder as I wander’ was frequently performed alongside Britten’s folksong arrangements in his recitals with Pears following their return to the UK in 1942, but they never recorded or published it since they subsequently discovered that the words and melody were not in the public domain: the song had been published by John Jacob Niles in 1934, and in direct consequence Britten’s version did not receive its first recording until 1995, thanks to a belated special arrangement between Niles’s publishers and the Britten Estate. The triptych ‘Evening’, ‘Morning’ and ‘Night’ (first published in 1988) originally formed part of the incidental music Britten composed in 1945 for the Masque and Anti-Masque of This Way to the Tomb, a play by Ronald Duncan, who in the following year went on to provide the libretto for Britten’s opera The Rape of Lucretia.Two other songs date from the 1950s, although the date of the second remains uncertain. In 1952, Britten prepared a comic duet arrangement of the Appalachian folksong ‘The Deaf Woman’s Courtship’ for Kathleen Ferrier to sing as part of a national tour with Pears and Britten conceived with the aim of raising funds for the English Opera Group. According to Britten’s memoir of Ferrier, she sang her part ‘in a feeble, cracked voice, the perfect reply to Peter’s magisterial roar. A masterpiece of humour, which had the audience rocking, but never broke the style of the rest of the concert.’ After Ferrier’s untimely death, the contralto part was taken over by Norma Procter, though the arrangement was to remain unpublished until 2001. Britten’s setting of Goethe’s ‘Um Mitternacht’ (published in 1994) was probably composed in 1959, shortly after the composer’s strong interest in German poetry had borne fruit in his tenor song-cycle Sechs Hölderlin-Fragmente. At this time, Pears was enjoying an enviable reputation as one of the leading exponents of Lieder in the world, repeatedly earning ecstatic reviews in the German press that inspired the BBC to capitalize on this success by carefully promoting his and Britten’s work in Germany.


  • Wykonawca Finley Gerald , Drake Julius
  • Data premiery 2010-05-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista:  Anthony Holborne 1. The Honeysuckle 2. Muy Linda 3. The Night Watch 4. Countess of Pembroke’s Paradise 5. The Fairy Round  Edward Collard 6. Go From My Window 7. Hugh Aston’s Ground  Daniel Bacheler 8. Pavan  John Danyel 9. Mrs Anne Grene her Leaves be Green  Anon 10. The Flowers of the Forest 11. Remember me at Evening 12. The English Nightingale  William Byrd 13. Lullaby (arr. for the lute by Francis Cutting)  Benjamin Britten 14. Nocturnal, after John Dowland, Op.?70 (arr. for the lute by Jakob Lindberg)  John Dowland 15. A Dream 16. A Fancy 17. Orlando Sleepeth 18. Galliard to Lachrimae 19. Mr Dowland’s Midnight 20. Farewell  John Johnson 21. Passingmeasures Pavan 22. Carman’s Whistle 23. Good Night and Good Rest


  • Wykonawca Lindberg Jakob
  • Data premiery 2018-05-01
  • Nośnik SACD

The cathedral in Coventry was almost entirely destroyed during a German air raid in 1940, with only the outer walls, bell tower and tomb of the first bishop remaining intact. These were preserved as a memorial. In the 1950s, the decision was made to incorporate the ruins in a new building. The first stone was laid by Queen Elizabeth II in 1956. and the new cathedral opened on May 25, 1962. Five days later, it was musically inaugurated with Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem, in a performance broadcast live by the BBC.At the time, Britten was probably the only British composer able to strike a  collective chord with his countrymen – even though in his operas, he always sided with eccentrics and outcasts. As a pacifist and homosexual, he had been personally familiar with the conflict between the individual and establishment since the 1930s. Yet Britten was not a political activist, for he was decidedly a member of a generation that held its peace when confronted with the dark aspects of community, Family or the military. Artistically, however, Britten was an activist, as Witness his antithetical heroes: Peter Grimes, Albert Herring, Billy Bud and Owen Wingrave. At times, his political message was so encoded that it seemed like a message in a bottle for a better future.    Britten's musical protest to war is very profound and impressive and amemorable concert of this piece took place in the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam in May 2011. This was recorded on Challenge Classics with Jaap Van Zweden and the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra. A performance of world class!


  • Wykonawca Various Artists
  • Data premiery 2012-04-01
  • Nośnik CD
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Tracklista: CD 1–2 LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN: Overtures CD 3–5 ROBERT SCHUMANN:  Symphonies Nos. 1 – 4 · "Zwickauer" Manfred Overture CD 6–7 PYOTR IL'YICH TCHAIKOVSKY: Orchestral Suites 1 – 4 CD 8 GUSTAV MAHLER: Symphony No. 4 CD 9–10 RICHARD STRAUSS: Don Juan · Till Eulenspiegel · Capriccio · Rosenkavalier-Suite · Metamorphosen CD 11 SERGEY RACHMANINOV: Symphony No. 2 · Vocalise CD 12 BÉLA BARTÓK: Der wunderbare Mandarin CD 13 BENJAMIN BRITTEN: Sinfonietta op. 1 · Sinfonia da Requiem ARTHUR HONEGGER: Sinfonie Nr. 3 "Liturgique" CD 14 GEORGE GERSHWIN: Rhapsody in Blue · Piano Concerto in F · An American In Paris CD 15 AMERICAN CLASSICS: BARBER · COPLAND · GERSHWIN · BERNSTEIN


  • Wykonawca Marriner Neville
  • Data premiery 2018-05-18
  • Nośnik CD

Ein neuer Titel der Virtuoso-Reihe: "Four Sea Interludes"Britten dirigiert Britten! Neben den CD-titelgebenden "Four Sea Interludes" und der Simple Symphony op. 4 dirigiert Benjamin Britten sein populäres Werk "The Young Persons's Guide to the Orchestra". Basierend auf einer Komposition von Henry Purcell vermittelt das Stück einen Überlick über das Instrumentarium und Klangfarbenpotential des Sinfonieorchesters. Es spielen das London Symphony Orchestra, das English Chamber Orchestra und das Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden. Virtuoso bietet:* Exzellente Aufnahmen weltbekannter Interpreten* Starkes Artwork und innovative Booklet-Informationen* Erfolgreiche Komponisten und ihre größten Werke* VIRTUOSO verbindet Zugänglichkeit und Integrität und präsentiert absolute Meisterwerke aus den Katalogen der Deutschen Grammophon und Decca in Referenz-Aufnahmen


  • Data premiery 2016-07-08
  • Nośnik Audio-CD