Product Details
Ian Bostridge - The English Songbook

Ian Bostridge - The English Songbook
From EMI

List Price: £15.99
Price: £10.88 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details

Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

28 new or used available from £4.25

Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. La Belle Bame sans Merci
  2. Sleep
  3. I Will Go With My Father A-Ploughing
  4. The Cloths of Heaven
  5. To Gratiana Dancing and Singing
  6. To Lucasta, On Going To The Wars
  7. Twilight Fancies
  8. Orpheus With His Lute
  9. Jillian of Berry
  10. Cradle Song
  11. The Dance Continued
  12. Linden Lea
  13. Silent Noon
  14. My Love's An Arbutus
  15. The Death of Queen Jane
  16. No Longer Mourn For Me
  17. Since We Loved
  18. The Sally Gardens
  19. Rest, Sweet Nymphs
  20. Come Away, Death
  21. Now Sleeps The Crimson Petal
  22. Bold William Taylor
  23. Brigg Fair
  24. The Little Turtle Dove

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #11405 in Music
  • Released on: 1999-10-04
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .25 pounds
  • Running time: 69 minutes

Customer Reviews

AN INDESCRIBABLY WONDERFUL ALBUM5
Ian Bostridge has one of the most beautiful voices on record, and has shown enormous courage and wisdom in selecting material that will extend and develop his extraodinary gifts. Not all of this material has been a perfect match for his smooth and soaring tenor voice, notably some of Schubert’s more dramatic “lieder”. In contrast, nothing could be more perfectly suited to Bostridge’s gifts than this generous and beautiful collection of traditional English songs by Britten, Finzi, Grainger, Warlock and others.

Bostridge brings more than just a beautiful tone and a subtle musical phrasing to these songs. In contrast with the pure vowel sounds of most continental languages, as Ian says in his sleeve-notes, the complex vowels of “Southern British English” are formidably difficult to render attractively in song. (It’s not just a question of singing them prettily. Think how accurately the pronunciation of a word like “house” or “bath” can betray someone’s geographical and social background – our vowels are a caste-mark as well as a means of communication). But somehow Bostridge himself, in his fruitful partnership with Julius Drake, manages to transcend the divisions and deliver these songs in a way that places no barrier between the listener and the music.

It is impossible in a written review to describe the sense of exhilaration that comes with these lilting pastoral airs and occasional boisterous ditties. They are at one and the same time ancient and modern, embracing at once the mutual cross-fertilisation between classical and “pop” sensibilities that has always underpinned the best of English music. Even the most trivial of these songs (e.g. “Jillian of Berry”) are memorable, and some of them (notably Sir Charles Stanford’s chilling musical setting of the Keats’ poem, “La Belle Dame Sans Merci”) would not have been beneath the great Schubert himself.

This is a wonderful album.

Perfectly Enjoyable5
I already liked Ian Bostridge, but I thought "English songs" would be rather light and without substance. But I have fallen in love with this CD and never tire of it! I was already an admirer of Vaughan Williams, Britten, Finzi, Warlock and Delius, and I'm glad for this introduction to other composers as well. Also, much beautiful poetry is chosen, from Shakespeare, Yeats, Rossetti, Keats, and others, and each is treated with careful consideration by the composer, *partnering* music with poetry rather than simply enhancing or overshadowing the lyric. Bostridge seems to have the perfect voice for this music, light and charming when appropriate, heart-breaking at other times, always an engaging storyteller. He obviously understands intimately each word and note that he sings. The listener can hear his facial expressions and body language! The English Songbook is a beautiful collection of excellent craftsmanship, and one of the best CDs I have.

A excellent collection of British and Irish songs5
This is a beautiful CD. The songs are excellent throughout. The understanding between Bostridge and Drake is evident. I especially liked the Finzi songs, but was intrigued to hear "The death of Queen Jane", a traditional folk song about Henry VIII and Jane Seymour which was rediscovered in the USA. A very good CD and one that I will return to often.