[ Chandos Classics / CD ]
Release Date: Sunday 1 April 2012
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.
"The tenor James Gilchrist sings sweetly and cleanly, without affectation, and Anna Tilbrook is finely responsive to the subtleties of the piano parts."
(Daily Telegraph)
"They are songs for a fastidious ear and a mind that shuns overstatement… There is a kinship with Britten, and in some of the later songs one may guess at a little of Tippet. …Gilchrist is his own man: a fine artist and particularly well suited to these songs. Anna Tilbrook is the totally admirable accompanist, with Alison Nicholls the harpist in the attractive Herrick settings."
(Gramophone)
"Gilchrist's smooth, lightish tenor is the ideal voice for this repertoire: few singers have his ease in floating a line without guttural interruption - in the melisma of 'De Socrate' from the Cocteau cycle Tombeaux, for example. Anna Tilbrook partners with insight and a subtle ear for capturing a song's mood through timbre; and Alison Nicholls proves equally involving in the harp-accompanied Five Herrick Poems."
(BBC Music)
"The tenor James Gilchrist sings sweetly and cleanly, without affectation, and Anna Tilbrook is finely responsive to the subtleties of the piano parts."
(Daily Telegraph)
Acclaimed as a concert soloist, recitalist and a recording artist, James Gilchrist is one of the finest British tenors of today. In his first solo disc for Chandos, he performs a representative survey of the songs of Lennox Berkeley which demonstrates the distinctly Gallic flavour inspired by his time in France along with a spiritual intensity from his devotion to Roman Catholicism. James is accompanied by Anna Tilbrook on piano and Alison Nicholls on harp.
This collection, of complete song cycles and individual songs is offered in a more-or-less chronological layout and presents five premiere recordings: Autumn's Legacy, Cocteau's Tombeau, Bells of Cordoba, Five Herrick Poems and Sonnet Op. 102. The miniature cycle, Cocteau's Tombeau dates from Berkeley's first year in Paris where he went to study with Nadia Boulanger and is characteristic of Les six. Autumn's Legacy is recognised as Berkeley's most ambitious cycle, commissioned by the Cheltenham Festival. The seven songs draw on a variety of poets including Beddoes, Lawrence Durrell, Tennyson and Hopkins - which show the range of Berkeley's reading.
James Gilchrist writes of the recording project, 'I was enormously excited to be given this opportunity to record some of Berkeley's songs. I've long known and loved many. But putting together this disc has allowed Anna and me to study his songs in some detail and find many new treasures. There is a strikingly varied approach to his setting of song, from sparse simplicity to almost over-egged lusciousness. But throughout is a truly individual voice. Recording the monumental Autumn's Legacy was a huge challenge, and Berkeley is able to find a convincing musical voice for Hopkins, a poet whom I feel often sees composers stumble. And it's striking how Berkeley kept coming back to setting French poems, with great success.'
This collection helps to reveal the status of Berkeley's vocal music, which makes an unrivalled contribution to the central repertoire of songs in the English - and partly French - tradition. Peter Dickinson provides extensive booklet notes about each individual song.
Cocteau's Tombeaux
D'un vanneur de blé aux vents
Automne, Op. 60, No. 3
Sonnet, Op. 102
Night covers up the rigid land, Op. 14, No. 2
Bells of Cordoba
How Love Came In
Five Poems of W.H. Auden, Op. 53 (1958)
Autumn's Legacy, Op. 58
Five Chinese Songs, Op. 78
Five Herrick Poems, Op. 89