Details
Holy Trinity Church
Bell Lane
Minchinhampton
Stroud
Gloucestershire
GL6 9BW
England
Programme
John Dowland – Come Again Sweet Love
Robin Milford – If It's Ever Spring Again
Gerald Finzi – It Never Looks Like Summer
Imogen Holst – Weathers
Ivor Gurney – In the Black Winter Morning
John Dowland – Praeludium
John Dowland – Fantasia no.7
Arthur Keegan-Bole – Elegies for Emma
~ Interval ~
Betty Roe – Beeny Cliff
Benjamin Britten – I will Give my Love an Apple
Benjamin Britten – At the Railway Station, Upway, Op.52 no.7
Ethel H.H. Richardson – Regret Me Not
Arnold Bax – The Market Girl
Kerry Andrew – The Echo Elf Answers
Henry Purcell – Evening Hymn, Z.193
Performers
Lotte Betts-Dean – soprano
James Girling – classical guitar
Programme Note
"Up against [a] dark background the west front of the church tower... rose distinct and lustrous, the vane upon the summit bristling with rays."
Thomas Hardy, Far from the Madding Crowd (1874)
For well over a century, composers, perhaps most famously, Gerald Finzi, Benjamin Britten and Arnold Bax, have been fascinated in setting Thomas Hardy's poetry and prose to music. To celebrate this century-long association, ‘Wessex Love Songs’ places settings of Hardy’s words alongside core repertoire from the English tradition of song.
The programme showcases the intimate combination of guitar and singer which has been a cornerstone of the English tradition since the renaissance. Many of the arrangements have been especially prepared for this concert and combination, providing an opportunity to hear afresh well-known works, including a world premiere, Arthur Kegan-Bole’s ‘Elegies for Emma’, which sets the great poems of 1912 to 1913 written shortly after the death of Hardy's first wife, Emma.
This programme is a celebration not only of English song but also of the English countryside and, in particular, the rural church as the inspiration for song and the focus of country life. Here connections with Hardy abound. Hardy loved hymns. He grew up with church and lived surrounded by music which featured in all aspects of life, from services in church to social occasions. These elements of rural life Hardy incorporated into his novels which include descriptions and accounts of travelling groups of church musicians to the singing of tradition folk songs. In Tess of the d’Urbevilles, Hardy used folk music to symbolise the link between Tess’ past and present and so we are reminded of both the continuity of the country church at the centre of our communities and the heritage of music and architecture that we treasure and love.