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Bonaventura Bottone, Corydon Orchestra, Matthew Best - Vaughan Williams: Hugh the Drover (2023)

Bonaventura Bottone, Corydon Orchestra, Matthew Best - Vaughan Williams: Hugh the Drover (2023)
  • Title: Vaughan Williams: Hugh the Drover
  • Year Of Release: 1994
  • Label: Hyperion
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks + booklet)
  • Total Time: 1:41:55
  • Total Size: 378 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 1. Buy, Buy, Buy! Who'll Buy?
02. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 2. Who'll Buy My Sweet Primroses?
03. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 3. Cold Blows the Wind on Cotsall
04. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 4. Ballads! Buy My Ballads, Pretty Ballads!
05. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 5. As I Was A-Walking One Morning in Spring
06. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 6. Bless me! What's This?
07. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 7. Show Me a Richer Man in All This Town
08. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 8. Clear the Way for the Hobby-Horse
09. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 9. They're Gone … My Husband That's to Be!
10. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 10. Sweetheart, Life Must Be Full of Care
11. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 11. Alone I Would Be as the Wind and as Free
12. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 12. Hey Day! She Will Obey
13. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 13. Sweet Little Linnet That Longs to Be Free
14. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 14. Horse Hoofs, Thunder Down the Valleys
15. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 15. Mary, Mary, Come Back I Say!
16. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 16. In the Night-Time I Have Seen You Riding
17. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 17. Mary! Mary!
18. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 18. Who'll Fight? A Fight! Who's for a Fight?
19. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 19. Brave English lads, Lovers of Manly Sport
20. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 20. Down, Down with John the Butcher
21. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 21. Alone and Friendless, on This Foreign Ground
22. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 22. Are You Ready? Go!
23. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 23. Hugh the Drover!
24. Hugh the Drover, Act I: Pt. 24. Oh, the Devil and Bonyparty
25. Hugh the Drover, Act II: Pt. 1. Past Four o'Clock, and Dawn Is Coming
26. Hugh the Drover, Act II: Pt. 2. Gaily I Go to Die
27. Hugh the Drover, Act II: Pt. 3. Hugh! My Dear One!
28. Hugh the Drover, Act II: Pt. 4. Rise up, My Mary; Come Away
29. Hugh the Drover, Act II: Pt. 5. Dear Sun, I Crave a Boon
30. Hugh the Drover, Act II: Pt. 6. O I've Been Rambling All This Night
31. Hugh the Drover, Act II: Pt. 7. Here, Queen Uncrowned
32. Hugh the Drover, Act II: Pt. 8. The Soldiers!
33. Hugh the Drover, Act II: Pt. 9. Dropped from the Ranks on a Winter Night
34. Hugh the Drover, Act II: Pt. 10. Now You Are Mine!
35. Hugh the Drover, Act II: Pt. 11. Halloo! Halloo! Mary and Hugh!

This remark by Ralph Vaughan Williams to Bruce Richmond, editor of The Times Literary Supplement, in 1909 or 1910, was the beginning of Hugh the Drover. Richmond found Harold Child, a Times leader-writer, and some weeks later Vaughan Williams wrote him a long letter† warning him that, ‘if our scheme ever comes to anything I see hardly any chance of an opera by an English composer ever being produced, at all events in our lifetime’, a forecast that happily proved incorrect – though in 1910 it must have seemed likely enough. He told Child that he wanted to try his hand at ‘an opera on more or less accepted lines, and preferably a comedy, to be full of tunes, and lively, and one tune that will really come off … This fitted in with another idea of mine which was to write a musical, what the Germans call Bauer Comedie – only applied to English country life (real as far as possible – not sham) – something on the lines of Smetana’s Verkaufte Braut [The Bartered Bride] – for I have an idea an opera written to real English words, with a certain amount of real English music and also a real English subject, might just hit the right nail on the head … the whole thing might be folk-song-y in character, with a certain amount of real ballad stuff thrown in’. He then outlined, as a suggestion, the essence of a plot which became Hugh the Drover and which shows that even at this early stage certain musical situations were very clear in Vaughan Williams’s mind – the fair scene, with the salesmen’s cries and the Ballad-Seller’s song, the fight, and the dawn return of the mayers after the love duet, one of the most poetic moments in the opera and based on a real-life incident told him by a Cambridgeshire folksinger.



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