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PROGRAMME PURCELL: Fairest Isle (from King Arthur) …………………………… The Company Sequence One PURCELL: Two arias from Dido & Aeneas (Librettist: Nahum Tate): Ah! Belinda, I am prest with torment (from Dido & Aeneas)……………………Hazel Dido, Queen of Carthage, is in love with Trojan hero Aeneas, but believes this relationship is doomed. She sings this heartbreaking aria to her servant Belinda. When I am laid in earth (from Dido & Aeneas) …………………...………….Marilyn Dido, in love with Aeneas, prepares for her fate. This poignant aria is constructed on a repeated descending chromatic figure (Ground Bass). VIRGIL: excerpt from The Aeneid (Translated by John Dryden) .Richard Digby Day Sequence Two HANDEL: V’adoro pupille (from Julius Caesar)……………………………. Valerie Cleopatra sings to Caesar of Cupid’s arrows (I adore your eyes, arrows of love). (Librettist: Nicola Francesco Haym) HANDEL: As steals the morn (from L’Allegro) …………………Valerie & Anthony As steals the morn upon the night and melts the shades away. This is a lovely duet from the third part of the Ode ‘L’Allegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderato’. Librettist: Charles Jennens) HANDEL: Two arias from Semele: Sleep, why dost thou leave me? (Semele) ……………………………………. Hazel William Congreve provided the lyrics for this ‘Opera in the manner of an Oratorio’. It was first performed in 1744 at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden. Where’er you walk (Jupiter) ……………………………………………………Bobby Jupiter sings this well-known aria in praise of the ambitious Semele, only later to lament his part in her destruction. WILLIAM CONGREVE: A hue and cry after Fair Amoret …….. Richard Digby Day Sequence Three HAYDN: She never told her love………………………………………….…Anthony Haydn composed two sets of six Canzonets to English texts. This one is a setting of William Shakespeare. BISHOP: Lo! Here the gentle lark ……………………………………………..Jessica Henry Bishop was a prominent figure in London, particularly from 1810-1840. This coloratura aria shares popularity with his equally well-known ‘Home Sweet Home.’ The lyrics are again by WILLIAM Shakespeare. MOZART: Soave il Vento (from Cosí fan tutte) ……………...Valerie, Hazel & John The story of this opera (‘Thus do all women’) centres around two sisters, Fiordiligi and Dorabella and features a complicated piece of deception from Don Alfonso and the sisters’ lovers in an effort to test the faithfulness of the latter. Here, with Don Alfonso, the sisters wave goodbye to their men who are (supposedly) going off to war. FIELD: Nocturne in B flat for Piano …………………………………………… .Julio The Irish composer John Field is reputed to have developed the Nocturne as a form of piano piece, later to be perfected by Chopin. This Nocturne shows Field at his best as a melodist. Sequence Four Two songs by Balfe: Then you’ll remember me (from The Bohemian Girl) ……………………………John Sometimes known as ‘When other lips’ this melodious aria is in response to ‘I dreamt that I dwelt in marble halls’. The Irish composer, Michael Balfe was prolific in his output. Librettist: Alfred Bunn. The Arrow and the Song ……………………………………………..Anthony & Chris This is a setting of a poem by Longfellow, arranged as a duet by Brian Benedict. WOOD: Music when soft voices die ……………………… Valerie, Hazel & Marilyn Charles Wood was an Irish composer and teacher, counting among his pupils Ralph Vaughan Williams. This is a lovely, mellifluous setting of Shelley’s poem, composed about the time of the outbreak of World War One. INTERVAL (20 minutes) Sequence One: Dante Gabriel Rossetti: Sudden Light ………………………….. Richard Digby Day An aria and two duets by Mendelssohn: It is enough (from Elijah) ……………………………………………………….. Chris Mendelssohn was a regular and a great favourite at the court of Queen Victoria. Of his Oratorios, Elijah is probably the most performed. Here it is sung in English Ich wollt’ meine Lieb’ (I would that my love) (Heine) .. ………….Valerie & Marilyn Gruss (Greeting) (Eichendorff) …………………………………………. John & Chris These two duets were often sung by Isobel Baillie and Kathleen Ferrier. We thought it would be a nice change to hear Gruss sung by two baritones. Sequence Two: A Song and a Piano Duet by Elgar: Shepherd’s Song (Barry Pain) ………………………………………………….Bobby One of Elgar’s charming, unassuming songs, first published in 1935.7 Salut d’Amour …………………………………………………………...Julio & Brian Elgar’s famously haunting violin melody arranged by the composer for piano duet. ALFRED LORD TENNYSON: Excerpt from Maud ………….. Richard Digby Day QUILTER: Love’s Philosophy ……………………………………………….. Valerie Roger Quilter made an impressive and valuable contribution to British Art Song. This is a rapturous setting of Shelley’s text – a very uplifting song. FINZI: It was a lover and his lass ……………………………………………….Chris Gerald Finzi also made a considerable contribution to British Art Song. He was an ardent pacifist and a great friend of the composer Howard Ferguson. This bucolic song, one of his Shakespeare settings, comes from his cycle ‘Let us Garlands bring’. Sequence Three: HAYDN WOOD: Roses of Picardy ……………………………………………Bobby The music of Haydn Wood, particularly the orchestral pieces, were primarily light in style. Later in life he took to writing musical comedies. He had a great gift for melody and composed about two hundred songs. This one was written for his wife. NOEL COWARD: Nina ………………………………………………………… John Witty, flamboyant musician, writer, director and bon viveur Noel Coward was a kind of British Cole Porter. Amongst the many songs he wrote is this typical, wittilyrhyming number that never fails to amuse. IVOR NOVELLO: Keep the Home Fires burning ……………………..The Company This patriotic, 1914 song epitomised the feelings of families whose men had gone to war, many doomed never to return. Here it is performed in a concerted arrangement by Brian Benedict. The Lyricist is Lena Gilbert Ford. WILFRED OWEN: The Send Off ………………………………. Richard Digby Day BRITTEN: The Last Rose of Summer (Groves of Blarney) …………………... Hazel A modern, haunting, iconic setting of Thomas Moore’s poem. Many composers have set these words, but Britten always has something new to say, as here and in the following Folk Song Arrangements. BRITTEN: British Isles Folk Song Arrangements: O Waly Waly (Somerset) ……………………………………………………...Marilyn The Ploughboy (Tune: W. Shield) ……………………………………………Anthony Oliver Cromwell (Suffolk) …………………………………………….. The Company