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              CD: MDT 
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            Benjamin BRITTEN 
              (1913-1976)  
              Britten in Scotland : The Complete Scottish Songs 
               
              A Birthday Hansel, Op.92 (1975) [19:28]  
              Who are these children? (1969) [20:53]  
              Cradle Song (Sleep, my darling, sleep) (1942) [3:16]  
              O that I’d ne’er married (1922) [1:27]  
              Ca’ the Yowes (1959) [1:49]  
              There’s none to soothe (1946) [1:49]  
              O can ye sew cushions (1942) [2:21]  
              The Bonny Earl o’ Murray (1942) [3:14]  
              Bonny at Morn (1976) [4:03]  
              Come you not from Newcastle? (1946) [1:19]  
              Dawtie’s Devotion (1969) [1:12]  
              The Gully (1969) [0:56]  
              Tradition (1969) [0:52]  
              Four Burns Songs (arr. Colin Matthews) (1975) [8:50]  
                
              Mark Wilde (tenor), Lucy Wakeford (harp: Hansel, Bonny at Morn), 
              David Owen Norris (piano)  
              rec. Turner Sims Concert Hall, University of Southampton, 17-19 
              August, 2009  
                
              NAXOS 8.572706 [74:42]   
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                  It is great to have all the Scottish songs by Benjamin Britten 
                  on one disc. However it is not only the completeness that is 
                  important. Most of the works on this CD have been relatively 
                  rarely recorded. At present the Arkiv catalogue lists only three 
                  other versions of The Birthday Hansel and five versions 
                  of Who are these Children? I cannot find a reference 
                  to the ‘Four Burns Songs’. So it is a welcome addition. 
                  Add to this, the committed and often moving performances from 
                  all three soloists and one has a ‘must-have’ CD 
                  for all Britten enthusiasts.  
                     
                  A Birthday Hansel was composed in 1975 to celebrate Her 
                  Majesty, Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother’s seventy-fifth 
                  birthday. It was one of the composer’s last works. The 
                  song-cycle contained seven songs in the Scottish dialect culled 
                  from the collected poems of Robert (‘Rabbie’) Burns. 
                  Out of interest, the word ‘Hansel' means a gift that is 
                  given to someone before the start of a new enterprise, or it 
                  can mean a welcome gift.  
                     
                  Britten does not utilise ‘existing’ folksongs, nor 
                  does he write pastiche tunes. What he has achieved is a synthesis 
                  of the distinguishing features of Scottish folk and dance music 
                  and applies it to Burn’s poems. In the present recording, 
                  Mark Wilde varies the ‘richness’ or ‘depth’ 
                  of the dialect which I think is a good plan. Unremitting ‘Harry 
                  Lauder’ would be difficult to stomach. The harp part is 
                  much more integral to the work than mere accompaniment: the 
                  Britten website notes that it employs ‘a wide range of 
                  devices and effects to colourful effect as well as providing 
                  the necessary transitions from song to song.’ It is this 
                  equilibrium between singer and instrumentalist that makes A 
                  Birthday Hansel so effective. It is convincingly performed 
                  by Mark Wilde and Lucy Wakeford.  
                     
                  The first performance of A Birthday Hansel was on 16 
                  January 1976 at Uphall which is near Sandringham. The performers 
                  were Peter Pears and the harpist Osian Ellis. A recording was 
                  later made at The Maltings, Snape by the same artists and was 
                  released as part of the Britten 
                  Edition on Decca.  
                     
                  After Britten’s death, the composer Colin Matthews made 
                  an arrangement for tenor and piano of four of the songs from 
                  A Birthday Hansel. It was published as Four Burns 
                  Songs. If I am honest, I prefer these settings to the original! 
                   
                     
                  Finally, Chris Ball has written in the sleeve notes that Britten 
                  used an ‘old’ edition of Burns’ poems which 
                  had a degree of anglicising of the ‘Lallans Scots’ 
                  dialect. He states that in A Birthday Hansel these words 
                  have not been corrected: however in the ‘Four Burns Songs’ 
                  the text has been corrected to follow the version in ‘The 
                  Complete Poetical Works of Robert Burns Bi-Centenary Edition 
                  (1993)’.  
                   
                  The liner-notes gives the listener a good clue for approaching 
                  Who are these children?: it is best to regard this difficult 
                  song-cycle as ‘two works in one’: it is a balance 
                  between the ‘bairn’s’ songs and those of the 
                  ‘world of war and pain’. In fact there are eight 
                  songs that explore ‘the happier, more innocent aspects 
                  of childhood’ and the remaining four examine ‘the 
                  plight of children in the context of violence and war’. 
                  William Soutar is one of the great writers of the Scottish Literary 
                  Renaissance - alongside Hugh MacDiarmid. I accept that some 
                  of his political views may not appeal to everyone: neither will 
                  his pacifism. However, to be fair to Soutar, he did serve in 
                  the Royal Navy during the First World War, so at least he has 
                  experience of some of the subjects he explores in his poetry. 
                   
                     
                  Yet the song-cycle itself, I find a little harder to come to 
                  terms with. I find that it lacks coherence. Some of the ‘songs’ 
                  are very short - one is just 34 seconds. Perhaps it is the mixing 
                  of the violence and innocence that I find ‘too near the 
                  bone’?  
                     
                  I have listened to this a number of times in this version and 
                  also in Daniel Norman’s recording 
                  and long felt that it is a difficult work to bring off. However 
                  I believe that Mark Wilde approaches the ‘dialect’ 
                  issue well. It is a fine performance of an often morbid and 
                  always challenging piece.  
                     
                  The present recording includes three additional poems from the 
                  cycle that were not used in the final arrangement. Three of 
                  the shorter dialect songs were set - ‘Dawtie’s Devotion’, 
                  ‘The Gully’ and ‘Tradition’. Britten 
                  wished these settings to be performed as separate songs and 
                  insisted that they were not to be incorporated into the song-cycle. 
                   
                     
                  Finally, Naxos feature all the ‘Scottish folksongs’, 
                  including the beautiful ‘Ca’ the Yowes’. However 
                  the lovely ‘O Can ye sew cushions?’ and the charming 
                  ‘Come you not from Newcastle’ should not be missed. 
                  One last treat is the attractive Cradle Song (Sleep, my darling, 
                  sleep) by Louis MacNeice who squeezes into this collection as 
                  an Ulster-Scot.  
                     
                  Lastly, I note that the assumption is made that listeners will 
                  have access to either the Internet or a range of Scottish poetry 
                  books for finding the texts of the songs. Interestingly the 
                  Naxos website uses the word ‘lyrics’ as its link 
                  to the poems! 
                  I never really associate Soutar and MacNeice as ‘lyricists’. 
                   
                     
                  The sound quality is good, the singing is effective and as I 
                  have noted above Mark Wilde does not overdo the ‘local 
                  colour’. Piano and harp both contribute to the overall 
                  value of this excellent and often moving CD.  
                     
                  John France   
                 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                 
                 
             
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