Britten Conducts Britten [Box Set]
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Average customer review:Track Listing
Disc 1:
- Salus aeterna
- Good people, in his holy name
- By the Royal Command
- Adept in magic
- The waters of Babylon
- Sirs, what is this?
- We do not lack enemies
- By the Royal Decree
- Procession
- Merodak! Lord of Creation!
- Bring them here before my Majesty
- O King, Nebuchadnezzar
- O all ye works of the Lord
- Shadrach, Meshach, Abenego
- O ye winter and summer
- Good people, we have shown you
Disc 2:
- Te lucis ante treminum
- I am the ferryman
- I come from the Westland
- But first may I ask you what is that strange noise?
- Clear as a sky without a cloud
- Near the Black Mountains there I dwelt
- A thousand leagues may sunder a mother and her son
- Ignorant man! You refuse a passage to me...
- I beg your pardon
- Curlew River, smoothly flowing...
- Today is an important day
- Look! While you were listening to my story...
- Ferryman, tell me, when did it happen?
- Hoping, I wandered on
- He whose life was full of promise
- The moon has risen
- Go your way in peace, mother
- Good souls, we have shown you...
Disc 3:
- Jam lucis orto sidere
- Ah - you people
- The ceremony
- I am father to you all
- Forgive me asking you
- Father, may I speak to you?
- Take you due portion
- Go, if you must go
- Welcome, welcome, stranger!
- You are tired from a long journey
- Nights are days
- You have gambled and lost
- Now - I have done what I said
- With joy I sowed
- My son
- O sing unto the Lord
- My children, you have seen
Disc 4:
- Lord Jesus, think on me
- I God, that all this worlde hath wroughte
- Have done, you men and wemen all
- Now in the name of God I will begyne
- Noye, Noye, take thou thy company
- Wiffe, come in! why standes thou their?
- Ha! children, me thinkes my botte removes
- Now forty dayes are fullie gone
- Noye, take thy wife anone
- Noye, heare I behette thee a heste
- The spavious firmament on high
- There was a ship came from the North Country
- Then up spake the Cabin-boy
- Casting his clothes off he dived into the sea
- They laid him on the deck
Disc 5:
- Sweep! Sweep!
- Sweep this chimney
- Now, little white boy!
- Pull the rope gently until he is free!
- Is he wounded?
- Sooty tracks
- Run, poor sweep-boy
- The kettles are singing
- O why do you weep
- Pantomime. Ah!...Blackguards!
- Help! Help! She's collapsed!
- The owl, wide-winging through the sky
- Soon the coach will carry you away
- Morning, Sammy! Lovely weather
- Ready Alfred?
- Coaching song: The horses are champing
Disc 6:
- Introduction
- The Birth of Nicolas
- Nicolas devotes himself to God
- He journeys to Palestine
- Nicolas comes to Myra and is chosen Bishop
- Nicolas from prison
- Nicolas and the Pickled Boys
- His Piety and Marvellous Works
- The Death of Nicolas
- Rejoice in God, O ye Tongues
- For I will consider my cat Jeoffrey
- For the Mouse is a creature of great personal valour
- For the flowers are great blessings
- For I am under the same accusation
- For H is a spirit
Disc 7:
- Procession
- Wolcum Yole!
- There is no rose
- That yong� child
- Balulalow
- As dew in Aprille
- This little Babe
- Interlude
- In freezing winter night
- Spring Carol
- Deo gracias - Adam lay ibounden
- Recession
- A Boy was Born (theme)
- Variation 1: Lullay, Jesu
- Variation 2: Herod
- Variation 3: Jesu, as Thour art our Saviour
- Variation 4: The Three Kings
- Variation 5: In the bleak mid-winter
- Variation 6: Finale - Noel!
- Begone, dull care!
- A tragic story
- Cuckoo!
- A New Year Carol
- I mun be married on Sunday
- There was a man of Newington
- Fishing Song
- The useful plough
- Jazz-Man
- There was a monkey
- Old Abram Brown
Disc 8:
- Part 1. 1. Introduction: Shine out
- Part 1. 2. The merry cuckoo
- Part 1. 3. Spring, the sweet spring
- Part 1. 4. When as the rye (The Driving Boy)
- Part 1. 5. Now the bright morning star
- Part 2. 6. Welcome Maids of Honour
- Part 2. 7. Waters above!
- Part 2. 8. Out on the lawn I lie in bed
- Part 3. 9. When will my May come?
- Part 3. 10. Fair and fair
- Part 3. 11. Sound the flute!
- Part 4. Finale: London, to thee I do present
- Part 1. 1. Bonorum summum omnium / 2. quae bene beateque vivendi
- Part 1. 3. At huius caelestis / 4. Maiorum imprimis virtus / 5. tum vero Aeneas Sylvius
- Part 1. 6. Et gubernacula mundi qui tenet / 7. ut ad longaeva tempora
- Part 2. 8. Docendi ac discendi aequitati
- Part 2. 9. Rhenana erga omnes urbs / 10. ut iustissime Basilea audiat / 11. O cives Basilienses
- Part 2. 12. Non autem cuncti hoc festo die / 13. vigeatque academia libera
- 1. In a garden shady
- 2. I cannot grow
- 3. O ear whose creatures cannot wish to fall
Disc 9:
- Requiem aeternam. Requiem aeternam
- Requiem aeternam. What passing-bells for these who die as cattle?
- Dies irae. Dies irae
- Dies irae. Bugles sang
- Dies irae. Liber scriptus proferetur
- Dies irae. Out there
- Dies irae. Recordare Jesu pie
- Dies irae. Be slowly lifted up
- Dies irae. Dies irae
- Dies irae. Lacrimosa dies illa
- Dies irae. Move him into the sun
- Offertorium. Domine Jesu Christe
- Offertorium. So Abram rose
- Sanctus. Sanctus, sanctus, sanctus
- Sanctus. After the blast of lightning
Disc 10:
- Agnus Dei. One ever hangs
- Libera me. Libera me, Domine
- Libera me. It seemed that out of battle I escaped
- Libera me. Let us sleep now... In paradisum
- Rehearsal: Requiem aeternam
- Rehearsal: Dies irae (opening section)
- Discussion in the control room between Britten and Galina Vishnevskaya (via her interpreter), then
- Rehearsal: Dies irae (end of movement)
- Rehearsal: Offertorium
- Rehearsal: Sanctus
- Discussion in the control room between Britten and Vishnevskaya (via her interpreter): Sanctus
- Discussion in the control room between Britten, Peter Pears and John Culshaw: Agnus Dei
- Discussion in the control room between Britten and John Culshaw: Libera me
- Rehearsal: Libera me
- Rehearsal: Libera me (closing page)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #83293 in Music
- Released on: 2006-05-16
- Number of discs: 10
- Format: Box set
Customer Reviews
Britten's "Other" Works
Of the four "Britten Conducts Britten" box sets issued by Decca, this one might be titled "The Miscellaneous Works." These 10 CDs collect various choral works, the three Church Parables, and the massive War Requiem. While the beginning collector might be better off starting with the operas, the song cycles, or the orchestral works, true Britten fans are eventually going to want this set.
The discs themselves are well recorded, with those marvelous Decca sonics of the 1960s--neither arid acoustics nor too much reverb to spoil the recordings. The Church Parables and the War Requiem in particular benefit from Decca producer John Culshaw's approach to recording, which set out to use the acoustics of the recording studio as an integral part of the performance. Britten's conducting is masterly: few others match his command of his own works (really, only Colin Davis and--at times--Andre Previn come close), and most of the works were recorded with the artists for whom Britten wrote them.
The first three discs are the Church Parables--"The Burning Fiery Furnace," "Curlew River," and "The Prodigal Son"--in which Britten mixed together medieval mystery plays, Japanese No drama, and his own musical sensibilities into something utterly unique. The works are spare, using a tiny instrumental ensemble and a handful of vocalists; but, oddly, they are among Britten's most sensual works. The vocal lines are graceful in a way that even "Peter Grimes" is not. Even if the music is not "religious" in the traditional sense of the word, this awe-inspiring music in the most traditional sense of the word.
The set also includes much of the music Britten wrote for amateurs and children. Although Britten is often regarded as something of an expert in the writing of music for non-professional performers, these works aren't at the highest standards of his output. "The Children's Crusade" is simply naive (what was Britten doing with a Bertold Brecht text, anyway?), "The Golden Vanity" is twee and cloying, and "The Little Sweep" is saccharine and fey: he manages to reproduce the exact style and content of a Victorian fable for small children, with the sort of lesson that makes Disney morality look like Kant by comparison.
However, once we pass to discs 6-8, things look up again. Here we have a wide range of Britten's choral music, from the traditional English feel of "A Ceremony of Carols" to the almost Mahlerian excess of the "Spring Symphony" (and who else but Britten or Mahler would make a vocal symphony about spring one of their darker works?), many of which the average listener may be hearing for the first time. The "Cantata Academica" is particularly delightful.
The set concludes with the massive "War Requiem," which I suspect many people will already own. Enough has been written about this particular recording (it is the original 1963 version with Peter Pears, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, and Galina Visknevskaya) that nothing more need be said. Except, perhaps, that this includes set includes the rehearsal extracts from the recording session released with the last remastering of the recording. These reveal Britten to be a passionate and witty conductor, the sort many musicians would hope to have leading them.
This is an expensive set, but for the Britten fanatic and the Britten fan it will become indispensable. It reveals a side of the composer different from the opera composer, and a side well worth knowing. This set is highly recommended.
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