Cox and Box / Trial by Jury (Complete operettas)

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GILBERT AND SULLIVAN
Cox and Box / Trial by Jury (Complete operettas)
James Gilchrist, Neal Davies, Donald Maxwell, Rebecca Evans / BBC National Orchestra of Wales / Richard Hickox

[ Chandos Classics / CD ]

Release Date: Friday 8 July 2005

This item is currently out of stock. It may take 6 or more weeks to obtain from when you place your order as this is a specialist product.

"If you are a G& If S fan, you won't be able to live without this disc; if you are not, this CD just might convert you."
(William Dart NZ Herald 3rd Aug 2005)

"If you are a G & S fan, you won't be able to live without this disc; if you are not, this CD just might convert you."
(William Dart NZ Herald 3rd Aug 2005)

"All soloists are strong and in good form: all baritones are excellent with clear diction and good expression. Neal Davies makes a good Cox and is probably the best sub-principal Usher I have heard. A highly pompous Counsel in Matthew Brook delivered his part with aristocratic RADA vowels that give extra colour. Rebecca Evans sings well but as the Plaintiff was a shade mature for the slip of a girl she represents."
(MusicWeb Aug 2005)

Richard Hickox directs a star-studded cast in this fantastic new recording of two early operettas by Arthur Sullivan. Cox and Box was first performed in 1866, when the composer was just twenty-four. It shared the bill with another operetta by writer W. S. Gilbert, and it is highly likely that this was how Arthur Sullivan and William Gilbert met. Trial by Jury, written as a commission for Richard D'Oyly Carte, was their second collaboration, and it was with this project that Gilbert and Sullivan discovered their joint creative voice. New and exciting, it took British musical theatre by storm.

Premiere recording of the original orchestration of Cox and Box which Arthur Sullivan approved for use at the Savoy performance in 1894.

The libretto of Cox and Box was an adaptation of Maddison Morton's popular farce Box and Cox by the editor of Punch, Francis Burnard. Sullivan wrote the music and the piece received its first performance - in a benefit matinée at the Adelphi Theatre - in May 1866.The proposal to present Cox and Box in a professional run came from impresario Thomas German Reed, and the work entered the repertory of his Regent Street theatre in March 1869. Interestingly, another name on the first-night programme was W. S. Gilbert, whose show was also opening. Cox and Box did well, and gained further popularity from a subsequent tour. Credit for bringing Sullivan and Gilbert into partnership for the first time goes to John Hollingshead, manager of the Gaiety Theatre. Needing a new musical piece for his 1871 Christmas season, he offered them work. The result was Thespis, a two-act burlesque on Greek mythology (the score of which is now lost).Although Thespis was well received, it did not lead Gilbert and Sullivan to plan any future collaboration. It was Richard D'Oyly Carte who brought the two men together again. Looking out for a short piece to put together with a production of Offenbach's La Périchole, he agreed with Gilbert that the legal skit the author had developed from a little piece published in the magazine Fun in 1868 would fit the bill perfectly. D'Oyly Carte liked Trial by Jury and proposed that Sullivan should write the music. The work's enormous success encouraged ambitious plans. Guided by D'Oyly Carte's sure business hand, a company was formed to produce the joint works of Messrs Gilbert and Sullivan, and from there the team went on to become one of the great theatrical partnerships.

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