Ian Venables
The Song Of The Severn Op. 43
for Baritone, String Quartet and Piano
Ian Venables
The Song Of The Severn Op. 43
for Baritone, String Quartet and Piano
- Formation Voix moyenne, 4 Cordes et Piano
- Compositeur Ian Venables
- Édition Set de parties - 4 Cordes
- Maison d’Édition Novello Publishing
- N ° de commande NOV165825-01
TVA incluse,
Hors frais de port
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Description:
Ian Venables' The Song Of The Severn is a cycle of songs in celebration of Worcestershire, scored for Baritone Voice, String Quartet and Piano.
'The Song of the Severn... clothespoems by Masefield, Housman, John Drinkwater and Philip Worner in sharply memorable music of bewitching lyricism, idiomatic grace and rapt instinct... No lover of the early-20th-century English art song or pastoraltradition should fail to investigate this notable issue. ' - Andrew Achenbach, Gramophone
'These five songs, for voice with piano and string quartet accompaniment, take the SevernRiverand its historical and natural associations as a common theme. They are absolutely stunning in their poignant beauty, their profoundly noble and moving sense of tragedy and desolation that never turns sentimental orlachrymose, and their perfect union of text and music to a level that rivals Schubert and Mahler. ' - James A. Altena, Fanfare Magazine
'The Song of the Severn... clothespoems by Masefield, Housman, John Drinkwater and Philip Worner in sharply memorable music of bewitching lyricism, idiomatic grace and rapt instinct... No lover of the early-20th-century English art song or pastoraltradition should fail to investigate this notable issue. ' - Andrew Achenbach, Gramophone
'These five songs, for voice with piano and string quartet accompaniment, take the SevernRiverand its historical and natural associations as a common theme. They are absolutely stunning in their poignant beauty, their profoundly noble and moving sense of tragedy and desolation that never turns sentimental orlachrymose, and their perfect union of text and music to a level that rivals Schubert and Mahler. ' - James A. Altena, Fanfare Magazine