Nicholas Phan, Myra Huang - Britten: Winter Words (2011)

  • 06 Jan, 10:48
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Artist:
Title: Britten: Winter Words
Year Of Release: 2011
Label: Avie
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 55:42
Total Size: 234 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

Winter Words, Op.52 (Benjamin Britten)
1 Winter Words Op. 52: At Day-Close In November 01:45
2 Winter Words Op. 52: Midnight On The Great Western 04:49
3 Winter Words Op. 52: Wagtail And Baby 02:13
4 Winter Words Op. 52: The Little Old Table 01:28
5 Winter Words Op. 52: The Choirmaster's Burial 04:17
6 Winter Words Op. 52: Proud Songsters 01:08
7 Winter Words Op. 52: At The Railway Station, Upway 02:53
8 Winter Words Op. 52: Before Life and After 03:11
Come you not from Newcastle? (Benjamin Britten)
9 Come You Not From Newcastle? 01:18
Little Sir William (Benjamin Britten)
10 Little Sir William 02:52
The Salley Gardens (Benjamin Britten)
11 The Salley Gardens 02:50
Seven Sonnets of Michelangelo, Op.22 (Benjamin Britten)
12 Seven Sonnets Of Michelangelo Op. 22: Sonnetto XVI 02:14
13 Seven Sonnets Of Michelangelo Op. 22: Sonnetto XXXI 01:33
14 Seven Sonnets Of Michelangelo Op. 22: Sonnetto XXX 03:56
15 Seven Sonnets Of Michelangelo Op. 22: Sonnetto LV 02:00
16 Seven Sonnets Of Michelangelo Op. 22: Sonnetto XXXVII 01:52
17 Seven Sonnets Of Michelangelo Op. 22: Sonnetto XXXII 01:23
18 Seven Sonnets Of Michelangelo Op. 22: Sonnetto XXIV 04:45
The Ash Grove (Benjamin Britten)
19 The Ash Grove 03:21
The last rose of summer (Benjamin Britten)
20 The Last Rose Of Summer 04:28
The Ploughboy (Benjamin Britten)
21 The Ploughboy 01:26

Performers:
Nicholas Phan (tenor)
Myra Huang (piano)

American tenor Nicholas Phan makes his solo recording debut with a deeply personal approach to the songs of Britten.

‘Winter Words’ is the solo debut release by American tenor Nicholas Phan. The recording was made in the wake of a recital tour in 2010-11 which culminated in his Carnegie debut at Weill Hall. A graduate of the Manhattan School of Music and an alumnus of the Houston Grand Opera studio Nick has performed with the opera companies of Los Angeles and Seattle, symphony orchestras of Atlanta, St. Louis and San Francisco, and the Marlboro, Ravinia and Edinburgh Festivals, among others. He sang in Stravinsky’s Pulcinella with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under Pierre Boulez which won a Grammy Award.

Nick presents a deeply personal perspective of Britten’s music, encompassing his own performing experiences to audience reaction. He says: “I’ve been a fan of Britten since playing his Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra with my youth orchestra in Detroit as a teenage violinist. But my great devotion to his music increased to an obsession when an excellent pianist and good friend asked if I’d perform with her at a small university in Missouri. She suggested Winter Words, saying, “I think these would sound really great in your voice, and I’ve wanted to play them for ages, so indulge me.” I researched and played through Britten’s settings of Hardy’s poems and before long, I was hooked.”

Approaching the performance in a small Midwestern town with some trepidation (“how would they react?”), Nick describes the audience’s overwhelmingly positive response: “my favourite piece on the program … the most lasting impression.” Such is the enduring quality of Britten’s sophisticated yet direct song writing, of which Nick is a leading torchbearer.