Sarah Connolly - My True Love Hath My Heart (2011)

  • 15 Dec, 16:04
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Artist:
Title: My True Love Hath My Heart
Year Of Release: 2011
Label: Chandos
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks+booklet)
Total Time: 62:49 min
Total Size: 216 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Folk Song Arrangements, Vol. 3, "British Isles": No. 6. O Waly, Waly
02. Folk Song Arrangements, Vol. 4, "Moore's Irish Melodies": No. 3. How sweet the answer
03. Corpus Christi Carol (after A Boy was Born, Op. 3: Variation 5)
04. Folk Song Arrangements, Vol. 5, "British Isles": No. 4. Early one morning
05. King David
06. Come sing and dance
07. 3 Songs: No. 2. Her Song
08. 2 Songs: No. 2. My true love hath my heart
09. 2 Songs: No. 1. Tryst (In Fountain Court)
10. 5 Elizabethan Songs: No. 4. Sleep
11. By a Bierside
12. Gavotte
13. Lost Love Song
14. More Songs of the Countryside: No. 1. Foxgloves
15. The First Mercy
16. 3 Cotswold Songs: No. 1. Cotsworld Love
17. No. 1. Foxtrot
18. No. 2. Slow Foxtrot
19. No. 3. Tango

Sarah Connolly received excellent reviews for her recital performance of English songs on 11 April 2011 at the Alice Tully Hall in New York. The New York Times wrote: ‘Ms Connolly’s voice was strong and steady through its range, velvety, but with a soft, subtle graininess that gave weight and presence to even her most ethereal floated notes.’

Here the mezzo-soprano, accompanied by Malcolm Martineau on piano, performs four arrangements by Benjamin Britten: three folk songs and one song from an early choral work. These complement the recent Britten CD on Chandos, on which Connolly performs the cantata Phaedra as well as A Charm of Lullabies (CHAN 10671).

Next come eleven songs from the 1920s, which is considered the golden decade for English art songs. Among the highlights are ‘By a Bierside’, Ivor Gurney’s stark reflection on death, written in the World War I trenches, and Herbert Howells’s ‘King David’ which has long been considered a masterpiece. Howells himself said: ‘I am prouder to have written King David than almost anything else of mine.’

The most recent contribution to this disc of English songs is the surreally retro A History of the Thé Dansant by Sir Richard Rodney Bennett, which was published in 1995.

Sarah Connolly gave a concert performance of this programme at the Alice Tully Hall in New York in April this year. The New York Times wrote: ‘Ms Connolly’s voice was strong and steady through the range, velvety, but with a soft, subtle graininess that gave weight and presence to even her most ethereal floated notes.’ She is ably accompanied by the pianist Malcolm Martineau as they explore four arrangements by Benjamin Britten, and eleven songs dating from the 1920s. This period is often considered a golden decade for English songs, with contributions from Ivor Gurney, Peter Warlock, John Ireland, and Herbert Howells. The compilation also includes a short song cycle by Sir Richard Rodney Bennett, A History of the Thé Dansant, which was published in 1995 and is surreally retro.


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