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I was quite surprised about the result. I never even knew he (Bo Holton) had conducted the work. For me Hickox (born TODAY in 1948) the RPO and John Pearly Shirt is Sea Drift..and the chorus is where it should be...adding colour. Bo Holton brings perhaps too much clarity to the work. Delius is, after all, part cowpat, part Wagner, part French night-life. Maybe a little smudging at the edges is needed? Mind you, I've only heard the bits played today. Must get more on Monday.......
I was quite surprised about the result. I never even knew he (Bo Holton) had conducted the work. For me Hickox (born TODAY in 1948) the RPO and John Pearly Shirt is Sea Drift..and the chorus is where it should be...adding colour. Bo Holton brings perhaps too much clarity to the work. Delius is, after all, part cowpat, part Wagner, part French night-life. Maybe a little smudging at the edges is needed? Mind you, I've only heard the bits played today. Must get more on Monday.......
But you've missed out the essential Scandanavian aspect of his Music - he spent much time in Norway, and was close friends with Grieg, Munch, and Strindberg: there is as much Expressionism in Sea Drift as Impressionism. (And there's the German aspect, too - Frederick/Fritz Theodor-Albert Delius' Sea Drift was heard three times in Germany before its British premiere, with Whitman's words in Helene-Sophie Emilie Jelka Delius-Rosen's' German translation.)
Mind you, having lived in a Bradford postcode area for twenty years - the weather here doesn't half help you follow Delius' unique handling of Form/Structure! (More Woolmills and trams than Cowpats in this Music!)
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
This one? Bruce Boyce, BBC Chorus, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. Sir Thomas Beecham
which I have for some reason! No idea when and where it came from..... it's a bit, well, aged!
and this one which was a charity shop bargain
BBC Music Magazine CD: Thomas Hampson, BBC National Orchestra and Chorus of Wales, The Bach Choir,
all under the direction of Richard Hickox. Superb performance and recording.
But you've missed out the essential Scandanavian aspect of his Music - he spent much time in Norway, and was close friends with Grieg, Munch, and Strindberg: there is as much Expressionism in Sea Drift as Impressionism. (And there's the German aspect, too - Frederick/Fritz Theodor-Albert Delius' Sea Drift was heard three times in Germany before its British premiere, with Whitman's words in Helene-Sophie Emilie Jelka Delius-Rosen's' German translation.)
Mind you, having lived in a Bradford postcode area for twenty years - the weather here doesn't half help you follow Delius' unique handling of Form/Structure! (More Woolmills and trams than Cowpats in this Music!)
He was French anyway, or at least as French as a huge chunk of their population is today.
He was French anyway, or at least as French as a huge chunk of their population is today.
- Roussel and Ravel both friends who knew his Music as he was writing it. Until his old age, when they became friends, Delius hated Elgar's Music with a passion that makes MrGG seem quite enthusiastic!
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
- Roussel and Ravel both friends who knew his Music as he was writing it. Until his old age, when they became friends, Delius hated Elgar's Music with a passion that makes MrGG seem quite enthusiastic!
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