Newsletter
Home On Sale Composers Seach CD DVD Order About How To

      Guild Records
Disc No: GMCD 7348
The strong historical resonances of both the countertenor voice and the recorder have inspired these magical works, all with inventive colours and surprisingly varied textures. Richard Steinitz's Hymn to Apollo at Delphi is based on ancient Greek melodies and was composed as a touching and unique wedding present for his wife. Ancient Rome is the cue for John McCabe's Two Latin Elegies, based on a piece for virginals by William Byrd, the music being punctuated by the tolling of David Munrow's much loved set of medieval bells. Haunting nature poems by Walter de la Mare and Ted Hughes respectively are strikingly set by Arthur Butterworth and Nicholas Marshall. Stephen Hough (best known for his consummate pianistic skills) contributes a triptych of song about graves, the last of which, a setting of Hardy's comic poem about spending the money for a aunt's tombstone on an evening of drunken revelry at the local hostelry, relieves the sad sentiments of the other two songs.
Price: Sek. 157
Name: Ancient Sorceries
 

       



Composer Name Performer
Steinitz, Richard (b.1938) Hymn to Apollo at Delphi
       
Nicholas Clapton, countertenor
John Turner, recorder
Jonathan Price, cello
Ian Thompson, harpsichord
Butterworth, Arthur (b.1923) Ancient Sorceries
       
Hough, Stephen (b.1961) Three Grave Songs
       
Marshall, Nicholas (b.1942) Cat & Mouse
       
McCabe, John (b.1939) Two Latin Elegies
       
Gardner, John (b.1917) Six by Four
       
Joubert, John (b.1927) Crabbed Age and Youth
       

Toccata, November 2010 Webmaster