The Great War Remembered in Songs and Poems
The long and vibrant tradition of art-song in England has seen many great composers from Finzi to Vaughan Williams, Gurney to Moeran and Warlock and countless more, supported for many years now by the English Poetry and Song Society.
This is the third of four albums of live EPSS concert performances made by Dunelm for private use and now on general release due to demand; it contains works by major composers and also the seven excellent finalists in the EPSS competition of 2004. The concert commemorates the tragic victims of the 1914-8 war including poet/composer Ivor Gurney amongst others.
These EPSS recordings were made on portable recording equipment and with less than ideal microphone placement and are not to our usual modern standard. However they contain fine performances and many very unfamiliar and exquisite songs, which will delight any lover of late-Romantic vocal music.
Track Listing
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Anonymous
- I want to go home (1:03) Ivor Gurney
- The Dying Patriot (3:06)
- Everyone Sang (1:36)
- If We Return (1:57)
- In Flanders (2:56)
- In Memoriam, Easter 1915 (1:03)
- I Heard a Soldier (2:41) Geraint Lewis
- It's not going to happen again (2:36)
- The Treasure (2:34)
- Clouds (2:45)
- Song (1:54) Geoffrey Kimpton
- Winter Warfare (1:56) Margaret Wegener
- The Cenotaph (3:37) John R. Williamson
- Before the battle (2:28)
- I stood with the dead (3:46) Duncan Reid
- I did not lose my heart (2:09) Dennis Wickens
- Attack (5;14) Elaine Hugh-Jones
- The End (3:09) John Ireland
- The Soldier (2:14)
- Blind (1:24)
- The Cost (1;18)
- The Dead (2:29) Jerome Kern
- We'll Never Tell Them (1:50)
Reviews
“If you have been waiting for this series to appear on disc, as I have, here is your chance. Those who have not yet caught the English art song bug may wish to explore elsewhere. But come back here for the rarities.
” —Ronald E. Grames
“Jeremy Huw Williams is a subtle singer with effectively nuanced phrasing. He is accompanied steadily by Nigel Foster in some challenging songs. This series will appeal to lovers of 20th Century English song, particularly if they are interested in worthy songs that have fallen by the wayside and are unlikely to be available elsewhere.
” —Robert A Moore