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The third volume of the annotated selected letters of composer
Benjamin Britten covers the years 1946-51, during which he wrote
many of his best-known works, founded and developed the English
Opera Group and the Aldeburgh Festival, and toured widely in Europe
and the United States as a pianist and conductor. Correspondents
include librettists Ronald Duncan (The Rape of Lucretia), Eric
Crozier (Albert Herring, Saint Nicolas, The Little Sweep) and E. M.
Forster (Billy Budd); conductor Ernest Ansermet and composer Lennox
Berkeley; publishers Ralph Hawkes and Erwin Stein of Boosey &
Hawkes; and the celebrated tenor Peter Pears, Britten's partner.
Among friends in the United States are Christopher Isherwood,
Elizabeth Mayer and Aaron Copland, and there is a significant
meeting with Igor Stravinsky. This often startling and innovative
period is vividly evoked by the comprehensive and scholarly
annotations, which offer a wide range of detailed information
fascinating for both the Britten specialist and the general reader.
Donald Mitchell contributes a challenging introduction exploring
the interaction of life and work in Britten's creativity, and an
essay examining for the first time, through their correspondence,
the complex relationship between the composer and the writer Edward
Sackville-West.
This definitive encyclopaedic work explores the origins of
percussion through the development of the early drums and
xylophones right up to the wide range of modern instruments and the
sounds they make. James Blades covers these early developments
globally from China and the Far East, India and Tibet, the early
civilisations in Mesopotamia, Egypt, Greece, Rome and Persia
through to mediaeval and renaissance Europe. He continues to
examine the role of percussion in the classical and romantic
orchestras and finally looks at the ways composers have pushed the
boundaries in modern music. Each chapter has its own photographs,
illustrations and bibliography and there are comprehensive indices
referencing all the composers and works discussed. This extended
edition includes two important new chapters. The first covers the
rise of the solo percussionist and is written by the world's
leading practitioner and one of Blades' former pupils, Dame Evelyn
Glennie, who also contributes a new Foreword, while recent
developments in orchestral percussion are covered by Neil Percy,
Head of Timpani and Percussion at the Royal Academy of Music and
Principal Percussionist of the London Symphony Orchestra.
Volume One of these remarkable letters and diaries opens with a
letter from Britten aged nine to his formidable mother, Edith.
Music is already at the centre of his life, and it accompanies him
through prep and public school and then to London to the Royal
College of Music, where the phenomenally gifted but inexperienced
young composer is plunged into metropolitan life and makes
influential new friends, among them W. H. Auden and Christopher
Isherwood. This was a time of prodigious musical creativity, a
growing awareness of his sexuality, and the dawning of his
political convictions. Most importantly, during this period Britten
met Peter Pears and established the musical and personal
relationship that was to last a lifetime. Volume One comes to a
close in May 1939, when Britten, accompanied by Pears, departs for
North America. The letters and diaries in this illuminating first
volume and its successor are supplemented by the editors' detailed
commentary and by exhaustive contemporary documentation. Together
they constitute a comprehensive portrait not only of the composer
but of an age.
This second of two volumes of the letters and diaries of Benjamin
Britten is supplemented by the editors' detailed commentary and
extensive contemporary documentation. The aim is to present a
portrait not only of the composer but of an age.
A Midsummer Night's Dream was Benjamin Britten's seventh major
opera and had its premiere at Aldeburgh in 1960. Britten and his
partner Peter Pears prepared a condensed version of Shakespeare's
much-loved comedy for the libretto, using (with the exception of a
single line) only the original text. In this newly commissioned
guide, Andrew Plant explores the genesis of the opera's
composition, including passages of recently published material from
Britten's own correspondence. Philip Reed examines the musical
language of the opera and has prepared a detailed thematic guide,
while David Nice outlines many of the different approaches to the
work in productions that have taken place over the last forty
years. An essay by Philip Brett discusses how the opera reflects
the central issues in Britten's work. Finally, a unique article is
included which Britten himself wrote for the Observer immediately
preceding the work's premiere. The present edition also contains
twentyfive black-and-white and colour photographs, the full
libretto, a discography, DVD guide, bibliography and website guide.
It will prove an invaluable companion to opera-goers wanting to
increase their understanding and enjoyment of this magical work.
This is a double volume dedicated to two masterpieces by Benjamin
Britten. While Peter Grimes established Britten as a composer of
international standing, Gloriana, composed for the coronation of
Elizabeth II, has never enjoyed a comparable fame. The variety of
mood, characterization and pace, in each, illustrates Britten's
exceptional gift for theatre. Commentaries on the scores reveal,
for instance, how much the popular concert extracts gain from their
context in the dramas. The essay by E.M. Forster - the inspiration
for Peter Grimes - is reprinted here, and Michael Holroyd discusses
Lytton Strachey's controversial Elizabeth and Essex - the source
for Gloriana. Contents: Benjamin Britten's Librettos, Peter Porter;
George Crabbe: The Poet and the Man, E.M. Forster; 'Peter Grimes':
A Musical Commentary, Stephen Walsh; Peter Grimes: Libretto by
Montagu Slater; 'Peter Grimes' and 'Gloriana', Joan Cross, Peter
Pears and John Evans; Some Reflections on the Operas of Benjamin
Britten, Buxton Orr; 'A daring experiment', Michael Holroyd; The
Librettist of 'Gloriana', Rupert Hart-Davis; The Music of
'Gloriana', Christopher Palmer; Notes on the Libretto of
'Gloriana', William Plomer; Gloriana: Libretto by William Plomer
Edward Gardner conducts the English National Opera Orchestra and
Chorus in this production of Benjamin Britten's final opera based
on the novella by Thomas Mann. John Graham-Hall plays Gustav von
Aschenbach, an ageing novelist who becomes obsessed with Polish boy
Tadzio (Sam Zaldivar). The performance was recorded at The London
Coliseum in June 2013.
Director Tony Britten's drama documentary examines the acclaimed
composer's lifelong commitment to pacifism. Using a dramatic
narrative to explore the development of Britten's pacifist beliefs
during the time he spent at the liberally progressive Gresham's
School in Norfolk between the years of 1928-1930, the film charts a
time which marked a crucial period of the composer's personal and
musical development. Interwoven throughout are contemporary
performances of the composer's works and contributions from,
amongst others, conductor and composer Joseph Horovitz, cellists
Anita Lasker Wallfisch and Raphael Wallfisch, and Britten's agent
for many years, Sue Phipps. John Hurt narrates.
Andris Nelsons leads the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra in
this 50th anniversary performance of Benjamin Britten's War
Requiem. The piece was commissioned to mark the consecration of the
new Coventry Cathedral, which was built after the original
fourteenth-century structure was destroyed in a World War II
bombing raid in 1940. 50 years after its premiere it returns to the
cathedral to be performed, as it was on its first airing, by the
the City of Birmingham Orchegstra, Chorus, and Youth Chorus. The
featured vocalists are Erin Wall, Mark Padmore and Hanno
Müller-Brachmann.
Benjamin Britten's opera, composed to celebrate the Coronation of
Queen Elizabeth II in 1953. He took as his starting point Lytton
Strachey's 'Elizabeth and Essex'. Sarah Walker and Anthony Rolfe
Johnson star.
Steuart Bedford conducts the Britten-Pears Orchestra in this
production of Benjamin Britten's opera, recorded on the beach at
the Aldeburgh Festival. The performance stars Alan Oke as the
eponymous character with Giselle Allan as Ellen Orford and David
Kempster as Captain Balstrode.
Jamie Walton performs three suites for solo cello composed by
Benjamin Britten. His performance is captured in Blythburgh's Holy
Trinity Church in Suffolk, England.
Collection of scenes from 12 productions performed at the
Glyndeboure Festival Opera over the last 13 years. The operas
featured are: 'Le nozze di Figaro', 'The Cunning Little Vixen',
'Gianni Schicchi', 'Cosi fan tutte', 'Billy Budd', 'Falstaff',
'Carmen', 'Giulio Cesare', 'Tristan und Isolde', 'The Rake's
Progress', 'La Cenerentola' and 'Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg'.
David McVicar's acclaimed production of Benjamin Britten's chamber
opera, recorded live during its premiere run at the Aldeburgh
Festival in 2001. Paul Daniel leads the English National Opera,
with performances by Sarah Connolly, Christopher Maltman, Catherine
Wyn-Rogers and Mary Nelson.
Richard Jones's production of Benjamin Britten's most popular opera
takes to the stage at the Teatro alla Scala in Milan. John
Graham-Hall stars as the eponymous, impetuous fisherman in this
mysterious tale set in a small fishing village on England's east
coast in the 19th century. Robin Ticciati, principal conductor of
the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, takes the helm in his La Scala
opera debut.
The renowned Russian cellist Mstislav Rostropovich performs
Tchaikovsky's 'Rococo Variations' at the Snape Maltings Concert
Hall in 1968, with Benjamin Britten conducting. Also included are
rare performances of Britten conducting excerpts from his opera
'Gloriana', with Peter Pears performing 'The Lute Song'.
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Night Mail (DVD)
Harry Watt, Basil Wright, W.H Auden, Benjamin Britten, John Grierson, …
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R268
Discovery Miles 2 680
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In Stock
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Lauded 1936 documentary, showing the various stages and procedures
of the operation of the Royal Mail train delivery service, that
remains one of the most instantly recognised films in British film
history.
It begins with a voiceover commentary describing how the
mail is collected for transit. Then, as the train proceeds along
the course of its journey, we are shown the various regional
railway stations at which it collects and deposits its cargo.
Inside the train the process of sorting takes place.
As it nears
its destination there is a sequence - the best known in the film -
in which WH Auden's spoken verse and Benjamin Britten's music are
combined over montage images of racing train wheels.
A work for soprano, contralto and piano lasting 3 minutes set to a
text by William Blake - this is the earliest of a number of
lullabies and cradle songs Britten wrote during the late 1930s and
1940s for Mary Ross McDougall and Anne Wood.
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