MP3 The Queens College Vocal Ensemble - Selected Partsongs of Hamish MacCunn
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(ID 109195561)
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User tags: classical: choral music, a cappella, mp3 album
This is the first recording dedicated solely to the choral music of Scottish composer Hamish MacCunn (1868-1916). MacCunnâs partsongs are inventive, delightful and charming works, many of which have never before been recorded.
12 MP3 Songs in this album (36:01) !
Related styles: Classical: Choral Music, A Cappella
People who are interested in Dale Warland Singers Tallis Scholars The Sixteen should consider this download.
Details:
As one of Scotlandâs most popular composers, Hamish MacCunn briefly dominated the London music scene in the late nineteenth century. Within two years of finishing his studies at the Royal College of Music in 1886, Sir George Grove and Sir August Manns premiered two of his overtures (Land of the Mountain and the Flood and The Ship oâ the Fiend) and three of his cantatas (Bonny Kilmeny, Lord Ullinâs Daughter, and The Lay of the Last Minstrel) at the Crystal Palace Concerts. The London Symphony premiered his third overture, The Dowie Dens oâ Yarrow, around the same time. In 1890, after his rapid rise to fame, MacCunnâs compositional output decreased as his new works received fewer performances than his earlier ones. Instead, he turned to conducting and teaching to support his family. The change in his career reflected his unwillingness to compose non-Scottish works as well as his stubborn and brash personality.
As early as 1888, critics began calling for MacCunn to branch out from his programmatic Scottish works and explore other musical styles, particularly more respected genres, such as the symphony or the oratorio. MacCunn rejected his degree from the Royal College of Music in 1886 explaining âthat musically I did not esteem it, and socially I thought of it and those who conferred it with infinite and undiluted disgust.â He exempted Sir Hubert Parry from this criticism but alienated the rest of the faculty, including Sir Charles Villiers Stanford, one of the most influential figures in British music at the time. MacCunn seemed determined to follow his own path while struggling to find his place within the musical world. After World War II, MacCunnâs music receded into obscurity, but in the past fifteen years it has begun to be performed, recorded, and studied with renewed vigor.
MacCunn built his reputation upon compositions that create atmospheric impressions of Scotland, such as the concert overture The Land of the Mountain and the Flood, or retell stories of Scottish folklore and literature, like his orchestral ballad the Ship oâ the Fiend (1888) or his opera Jeanie Deans (1894). Many of his later works highlight musical tensions between Scotland and England and Scottish nationalism and the British Empire. As a Scottish composer working in London his career shows the challenges composers facedâparticularly British composers from outside of Englandâin the British musical scene. While his orchestral compositions helped establish his career, the majority of MacCunnâs compositions are for voice. His partsongs were among his most popular compositions during his lifetime and were performed throughout the British Isles.
This recording includes twelve of MacCunnâs twenty-three extant partsongs, most of which were written during his time at the Royal College of Music and in the early years of his professional career. Some of these may be academic exercises or works for fellow students, but all illustrate his well-developed talent as a prodigy, abrupt and inventive harmonic transitions, and his sensitivity to the text. The early works cover a broad range of emotions. The joy of youthful, innocent love in âSerenadeâ contrasts with the poignant sorrow of losing a loved one in âSoldier, Rest!â The now out-dated thrills of fox hunting are vividly portrayed, complete with hunting horn calls, in âHark Forward!â Two partsongs have Elizabethan texts, Shakespeareâs âO Mistress Mineâ and Richard Alisonâs âThere is a Garden.â While MacCunn focused on British poets, âIt Was a Lassâ is by American author Mary E. Wilkins.
MacCunn stopped writing partsongs while he was composing his two operas Jeanie Deans (1894) and Diarmid (1897). In 1914, two years before his death, he returned to the genre. His final four partsongs, for three-part womenâs choir with piano, reflect contemporary musical styles and show a more polished compositional technique while retaining the freshness of his youthful compositions. The subtle but sophisticated text painting in âNightâ shows MacCunnâs choral writing at its best. A more mature view of love can be seen in the selection of texts and the longing expressed in âO My Love, Leave Me Not!â and âOn a Faded Violet.â âWhither,â Longfellowâs translation of the poem âWohin?â from Schubertâs Die schöne Müllerin, foreshadows elements of popular music of the 1920s and 1930s. In order to convey a sense of MacCunnâs developmentâfrom the earliest pieces to these lovely, late worksâthe partsongs on this recording are presented in chronological order. The sophistication of âOh Where Art Thou Dreaming?,â which MacCunn wrote when he was 16, is particularly striking in this context.
In spite of the popularity of British choral music in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, few of the a cappella works from this era have been published in modern editions or recorded. Only âOh Where Art Thou Dreaming?â has appeared recently (in Oxford University Pressâs English Romantic Partsongs). âYe Little Birdsâ exists only in manuscript form. Most, including the four works for womenâs voices, are recorded here for the first time.
12 MP3 Songs in this album (36:01) !
Related styles: Classical: Choral Music, A Cappella
People who are interested in Dale Warland Singers Tallis Scholars The Sixteen should consider this download.
Details:
As one of Scotlandâs most popular composers, Hamish MacCunn briefly dominated the London music scene in the late nineteenth century. Within two years of finishing his studies at the Royal College of Music in 1886, Sir George Grove and Sir August Manns premiered two of his overtures (Land of the Mountain and the Flood and The Ship oâ the Fiend) and three of his cantatas (Bonny Kilmeny, Lord Ullinâs Daughter, and The Lay of the Last Minstrel) at the Crystal Palace Concerts. The London Symphony premiered his third overture, The Dowie Dens oâ Yarrow, around the same time. In 1890, after his rapid rise to fame, MacCunnâs compositional output decreased as his new works received fewer performances than his earlier ones. Instead, he turned to conducting and teaching to support his family. The change in his career reflected his unwillingness to compose non-Scottish works as well as his stubborn and brash personality.
As early as 1888, critics began calling for MacCunn to branch out from his programmatic Scottish works and explore other musical styles, particularly more respected genres, such as the symphony or the oratorio. MacCunn rejected his degree from the Royal College of Music in 1886 explaining âthat musically I did not esteem it, and socially I thought of it and those who conferred it with infinite and undiluted disgust.â He exempted Sir Hubert Parry from this criticism but alienated the rest of the faculty, including Sir Charles Villiers Stanford, one of the most influential figures in British music at the time. MacCunn seemed determined to follow his own path while struggling to find his place within the musical world. After World War II, MacCunnâs music receded into obscurity, but in the past fifteen years it has begun to be performed, recorded, and studied with renewed vigor.
MacCunn built his reputation upon compositions that create atmospheric impressions of Scotland, such as the concert overture The Land of the Mountain and the Flood, or retell stories of Scottish folklore and literature, like his orchestral ballad the Ship oâ the Fiend (1888) or his opera Jeanie Deans (1894). Many of his later works highlight musical tensions between Scotland and England and Scottish nationalism and the British Empire. As a Scottish composer working in London his career shows the challenges composers facedâparticularly British composers from outside of Englandâin the British musical scene. While his orchestral compositions helped establish his career, the majority of MacCunnâs compositions are for voice. His partsongs were among his most popular compositions during his lifetime and were performed throughout the British Isles.
This recording includes twelve of MacCunnâs twenty-three extant partsongs, most of which were written during his time at the Royal College of Music and in the early years of his professional career. Some of these may be academic exercises or works for fellow students, but all illustrate his well-developed talent as a prodigy, abrupt and inventive harmonic transitions, and his sensitivity to the text. The early works cover a broad range of emotions. The joy of youthful, innocent love in âSerenadeâ contrasts with the poignant sorrow of losing a loved one in âSoldier, Rest!â The now out-dated thrills of fox hunting are vividly portrayed, complete with hunting horn calls, in âHark Forward!â Two partsongs have Elizabethan texts, Shakespeareâs âO Mistress Mineâ and Richard Alisonâs âThere is a Garden.â While MacCunn focused on British poets, âIt Was a Lassâ is by American author Mary E. Wilkins.
MacCunn stopped writing partsongs while he was composing his two operas Jeanie Deans (1894) and Diarmid (1897). In 1914, two years before his death, he returned to the genre. His final four partsongs, for three-part womenâs choir with piano, reflect contemporary musical styles and show a more polished compositional technique while retaining the freshness of his youthful compositions. The subtle but sophisticated text painting in âNightâ shows MacCunnâs choral writing at its best. A more mature view of love can be seen in the selection of texts and the longing expressed in âO My Love, Leave Me Not!â and âOn a Faded Violet.â âWhither,â Longfellowâs translation of the poem âWohin?â from Schubertâs Die schöne Müllerin, foreshadows elements of popular music of the 1920s and 1930s. In order to convey a sense of MacCunnâs developmentâfrom the earliest pieces to these lovely, late worksâthe partsongs on this recording are presented in chronological order. The sophistication of âOh Where Art Thou Dreaming?,â which MacCunn wrote when he was 16, is particularly striking in this context.
In spite of the popularity of British choral music in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, few of the a cappella works from this era have been published in modern editions or recorded. Only âOh Where Art Thou Dreaming?â has appeared recently (in Oxford University Pressâs English Romantic Partsongs). âYe Little Birdsâ exists only in manuscript form. Most, including the four works for womenâs voices, are recorded here for the first time.
in partnership with CDbaby
User tags: classical: choral music, a cappella, mp3 album
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