Ann Murray sings Irish Songs

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Edmund J. Pendleton, Traditional, Michael (Dewar) Head, Ludwig van Beethoven, Vittorio Rieti, E(rnest) J(ohn) Moeran, Herbert Hughes, Samuel Barber, Hector Berlioz, Arnold (Edward Trevor) Bax

Label: Forlane

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 66

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: 16784

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Johnny, I hardly knew ye! Herbert Hughes, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Herbert Hughes, Composer
How sweet and how pleasing the birds sing in tune Traditional, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Traditional, Composer
Bid Adieu Edmund J. Pendleton, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Edmund J. Pendleton, Composer
Graham Johnson, Piano
(The) Star of the County Down Traditional, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Traditional, Composer
(12) Irish Songs, Movement: No. 9, Oh! would I were but that sweet linnet (duet) Ludwig van Beethoven, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Ludwig van Beethoven, Composer
(12) Irish Songs, Movement: No. 12, He promised me at parting (duet) Ludwig van Beethoven, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Ludwig van Beethoven, Composer
My love passed me by E(rnest) J(ohn) Moeran, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
E(rnest) J(ohn) Moeran, Composer
Graham Johnson, Piano
(The) Roving dingle boy E(rnest) J(ohn) Moeran, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
E(rnest) J(ohn) Moeran, Composer
Graham Johnson, Piano
(The) Tinker's Daughter Traditional, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Traditional, Composer
Kitty I am in love with you E(rnest) J(ohn) Moeran, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
E(rnest) J(ohn) Moeran, Composer
Graham Johnson, Piano
Bright Cap E(rnest) J(ohn) Moeran, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
E(rnest) J(ohn) Moeran, Composer
Graham Johnson, Piano
(9) Mélodies, 'Irlande', Movement: La belle voyageuse (mez & pf/orch) Hector Berlioz, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Hector Berlioz, Composer
(9) Mélodies, 'Irlande', Movement: L'origine de la harpe (sop/ten and pf) Hector Berlioz, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Hector Berlioz, Composer
(3) Songs Samuel Barber, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Samuel Barber, Composer
Nuvoletta Samuel Barber, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Samuel Barber, Composer
(The) Fiddler of Dooney Vittorio Rieti, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Vittorio Rieti, Composer
When you are old Vittorio Rieti, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Vittorio Rieti, Composer
Maid Quiet Vittorio Rieti, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Vittorio Rieti, Composer
Brown Penny Vittorio Rieti, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Vittorio Rieti, Composer
(A) Piper Michael (Dewar) Head, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Michael (Dewar) Head, Composer
(5) Irish Songs, Movement: I heard a piper piping (wds. J. Campbell) Arnold (Edward Trevor) Bax, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Arnold (Edward Trevor) Bax, Composer
Graham Johnson, Piano
When thro' life unblest we rove... Herbert Hughes, Composer
Ann Murray, Mezzo soprano
Graham Johnson, Piano
Herbert Hughes, Composer
Irish song has a world of life in it, is not puffed-up, knows that a good laugh is part of life just as much as a good cry, enjoys a tale, a tune and a dance. This was evident in the earlier recital by these artists, ‘The Last Rose of Summer’ (Hyperion, 8/93), and perhaps more engagingly so, for that was all-Irish whereas this, as a glance at the contents shows, is rather more cosmopolitan. There is also more of the ‘art-song’ in this (inverted commas because although I always think I can tell when ’tis and ’tisn’t I tend to fight shy of attempting a definition). Herbert Hughes and Beethoven, for instance, preserve the folk-song but bring it into the drawing-room, the borderline of ‘art-song’. Samuel Barber sets Joyce with as deliberate an exercise of the artist’s resources as Hugo Wolf setting Goethe. Berlioz and Bax absorb the folk element and use it to make something which is of their own substance. The interesting Vittorio Rieti, in his Two Songs between Two Waltzes, seems not to be particularly aware of Ireland at all. But of course the listener is aware all the time, for though the music tells of Paris, Venice, Vienna, the words are still Yeats’s and their accent is unmistakable.
The performances are sensitive and spirited, recorded sound is fine, and an excellent essay on the repertoire is contributed by David Cairns. As on previous occasions, I find enjoyment of Ann Murray’s singing tends to vary in inverse proportion to the height and loudness of her notes: unevenness of production and deterioration of tone quality I find more troublesome in this recital than in the earlier one. Even so, she will sometimes come up with phrases of real beauty, as she does in the song by Bax and in Barber’s Nuvoletta. There is always character in her singing, and of course there are listeners for whom the purely vocal qualities are a secondary matter at best. Another slight misgiving I have relates to the number of songs in which the words are clearly a man’s. And I’d have liked a touch more rubato in The Star of the County Down. Still, it’s a delightful programme, with many ‘discoveries’, not least the haunting melody of Bid Adieu, written for one of his own poems by James Joyce, who, as David Cairns suggests, is quite probably ‘the star of the disc’.'

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