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Benjamin Britten’s

Song Catalogue

Winter Words

High voice Piano

The eight settings of Thomas Hardy, Winter Words, were written in 1953 - in between the operas Gloriana and The Turn of the Screw. While in no way sacrificing the abundance of musical invention and imagery found in the earlier song-cycles, the textures are generally leaner and more economical with the result that the text is projected with particular clarity. Among the notable features to be found in the work are the train-whistle noises in 'Midnight on the Great Western' which also come to symbolise the 'world unknown' that the journeying boy is travelling towards. In 'The Choirmaster's Burial' (or 'The tenor man's story'), the departed master's favourite hymn-tune 'Mount Ephraim' is woven through the texture (though characteristically re-harmonized in parallel triads) with the magical moment when the tenor ushers in the ghostly graveyard appearance of 'the band all in white'. In 'At the Railway Station, Upway' (or 'The convict and boy with the violin'), the piano accompaniment is imaginatively conceived as if it were a solo fiddle part with a particularly telling use of musical irony when the handcuffed convict breaks into song at the line 'This life so free', trapped within the confines of an implacably reiterated C major chord. The cycle concludes with one of Britten's most impressive songs, 'Before life and after'. The impassively repeated triads in the pianist's left hand coupled with the bare octaves above seem, on the face of it, to be a crudely unsophisticated device, but Britten uses this studied simplicity to symbolise a state of uncorrupted, primeval innocence 'before the birth of consciousness, when all went well'. In this final song, Britten's favourite theme of the conflict between innocence and experience seems to be powerfully and movingly distilled.

Audio extracts courtesy of Decca. Peter Pears (tenor), Benjamin Britten (piano) (1954)

Year of Composition
1954
Length
20 minutes
Language
English
Vocal Range
Publisher
Boosey and Hawkes
Type
Cycle
Voice Type
High voice
Accompaniment
Piano
Buy Score

Winter Words

High voice Piano

The eight settings of Thomas Hardy, Winter Words, were written in 1953 - in between the operas Gloriana and The Turn of the Screw. While in no way sacrificing the abundance of musical invention and imagery found in the earlier song-cycles, the textures are generally leaner and more economical with the result that the text is projected with particular clarity. Among the notable features to be found in the work are the train-whistle noises in 'Midnight on the Great Western' which also come to symbolise the 'world unknown' that the journeying boy is travelling towards. In 'The Choirmaster's Burial' (or 'The tenor man's story'), the departed master's favourite hymn-tune 'Mount Ephraim' is woven through the texture (though characteristically re-harmonized in parallel triads) with the magical moment when the tenor ushers in the ghostly graveyard appearance of 'the band all in white'. In 'At the Railway Station, Upway' (or 'The convict and boy with the violin'), the piano accompaniment is imaginatively conceived as if it were a solo fiddle part with a particularly telling use of musical irony when the handcuffed convict breaks into song at the line 'This life so free', trapped within the confines of an implacably reiterated C major chord. The cycle concludes with one of Britten's most impressive songs, 'Before life and after'. The impassively repeated triads in the pianist's left hand coupled with the bare octaves above seem, on the face of it, to be a crudely unsophisticated device, but Britten uses this studied simplicity to symbolise a state of uncorrupted, primeval innocence 'before the birth of consciousness, when all went well'. In this final song, Britten's favourite theme of the conflict between innocence and experience seems to be powerfully and movingly distilled.

Audio extracts courtesy of Decca. Peter Pears (tenor), Benjamin Britten (piano) (1954)

Year of Composition
1954
Length
20 minutes
Language
English
Vocal Range
Publisher
Boosey and Hawkes
Type
Cycle
Voice Type
High voice
Accompaniment
Piano
Buy Score

Winter Words

High voice Piano

The eight settings of Thomas Hardy, Winter Words, were written in 1953 - in between the operas Gloriana and The Turn of the Screw. While in no way sacrificing the abundance of musical invention and imagery found in the earlier song-cycles, the textures are generally leaner and more economical with the result that the text is projected with particular clarity. Among the notable features to be found in the work are the train-whistle noises in 'Midnight on the Great Western' which also come to symbolise the 'world unknown' that the journeying boy is travelling towards. In 'The Choirmaster's Burial' (or 'The tenor man's story'), the departed master's favourite hymn-tune 'Mount Ephraim' is woven through the texture (though characteristically re-harmonized in parallel triads) with the magical moment when the tenor ushers in the ghostly graveyard appearance of 'the band all in white'. In 'At the Railway Station, Upway' (or 'The convict and boy with the violin'), the piano accompaniment is imaginatively conceived as if it were a solo fiddle part with a particularly telling use of musical irony when the handcuffed convict breaks into song at the line 'This life so free', trapped within the confines of an implacably reiterated C major chord. The cycle concludes with one of Britten's most impressive songs, 'Before life and after'. The impassively repeated triads in the pianist's left hand coupled with the bare octaves above seem, on the face of it, to be a crudely unsophisticated device, but Britten uses this studied simplicity to symbolise a state of uncorrupted, primeval innocence 'before the birth of consciousness, when all went well'. In this final song, Britten's favourite theme of the conflict between innocence and experience seems to be powerfully and movingly distilled.

Audio extracts courtesy of Decca. Peter Pears (tenor), Benjamin Britten (piano) (1954)

Year of Composition
1954
Length
20 minutes
Language
English
Vocal Range
Publisher
Boosey and Hawkes
Type
Cycle
Voice Type
High voice
Accompaniment
Piano
Buy Score

Winter Words

High voice Piano

The eight settings of Thomas Hardy, Winter Words, were written in 1953 - in between the operas Gloriana and The Turn of the Screw. While in no way sacrificing the abundance of musical invention and imagery found in the earlier song-cycles, the textures are generally leaner and more economical with the result that the text is projected with particular clarity. Among the notable features to be found in the work are the train-whistle noises in 'Midnight on the Great Western' which also come to symbolise the 'world unknown' that the journeying boy is travelling towards. In 'The Choirmaster's Burial' (or 'The tenor man's story'), the departed master's favourite hymn-tune 'Mount Ephraim' is woven through the texture (though characteristically re-harmonized in parallel triads) with the magical moment when the tenor ushers in the ghostly graveyard appearance of 'the band all in white'. In 'At the Railway Station, Upway' (or 'The convict and boy with the violin'), the piano accompaniment is imaginatively conceived as if it were a solo fiddle part with a particularly telling use of musical irony when the handcuffed convict breaks into song at the line 'This life so free', trapped within the confines of an implacably reiterated C major chord. The cycle concludes with one of Britten's most impressive songs, 'Before life and after'. The impassively repeated triads in the pianist's left hand coupled with the bare octaves above seem, on the face of it, to be a crudely unsophisticated device, but Britten uses this studied simplicity to symbolise a state of uncorrupted, primeval innocence 'before the birth of consciousness, when all went well'. In this final song, Britten's favourite theme of the conflict between innocence and experience seems to be powerfully and movingly distilled.

Audio extracts courtesy of Decca. Peter Pears (tenor), Benjamin Britten (piano) (1954)

Year of Composition
1954
Length
20 minutes
Language
English
Vocal Range
Publisher
Boosey and Hawkes
Type
Cycle
Voice Type
High voice
Accompaniment
Piano
Buy Score

Winter Words

High voice Piano

The eight settings of Thomas Hardy, Winter Words, were written in 1953 - in between the operas Gloriana and The Turn of the Screw. While in no way sacrificing the abundance of musical invention and imagery found in the earlier song-cycles, the textures are generally leaner and more economical with the result that the text is projected with particular clarity. Among the notable features to be found in the work are the train-whistle noises in 'Midnight on the Great Western' which also come to symbolise the 'world unknown' that the journeying boy is travelling towards. In 'The Choirmaster's Burial' (or 'The tenor man's story'), the departed master's favourite hymn-tune 'Mount Ephraim' is woven through the texture (though characteristically re-harmonized in parallel triads) with the magical moment when the tenor ushers in the ghostly graveyard appearance of 'the band all in white'. In 'At the Railway Station, Upway' (or 'The convict and boy with the violin'), the piano accompaniment is imaginatively conceived as if it were a solo fiddle part with a particularly telling use of musical irony when the handcuffed convict breaks into song at the line 'This life so free', trapped within the confines of an implacably reiterated C major chord. The cycle concludes with one of Britten's most impressive songs, 'Before life and after'. The impassively repeated triads in the pianist's left hand coupled with the bare octaves above seem, on the face of it, to be a crudely unsophisticated device, but Britten uses this studied simplicity to symbolise a state of uncorrupted, primeval innocence 'before the birth of consciousness, when all went well'. In this final song, Britten's favourite theme of the conflict between innocence and experience seems to be powerfully and movingly distilled.

Audio extracts courtesy of Decca. Peter Pears (tenor), Benjamin Britten (piano) (1954)

Year of Composition
1954
Length
20 minutes
Language
English
Vocal Range
Publisher
Boosey and Hawkes
Type
Cycle
Voice Type
High voice
Accompaniment
Piano
Buy Score

Brittens Song Catalogue

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