Http Goodmorningbritten Wordpress Com 2013-08-10 Listening-To-britten-ballad-Of-heroes-op-14

7
← Listening to Britten – Johnson Over Jordan Britten through the eyes of…Sandy Burnett → Listening to Britten – Ballad of Heroes, Op.14 Posted on August 10, 2013 Search Recent Posts Britten on Record: Haydn: Sonata for piano and violin in G major Good Morning Britten Home Welcome to team BB! About Listening to Britten Britten on Record Around Britten in 80 songs Review links Contact Do you need professional PDFs? Try PDFmyURL!

Transcript of Http Goodmorningbritten Wordpress Com 2013-08-10 Listening-To-britten-ballad-Of-heroes-op-14

Study for ‘Over The Top’ (1918) by John Nash, used courtesy of the Imperial War

Museum

Ballad of Heroes, Op.14 – for tenor (or soprano) solo, chorus and orchestra (28

February 1939 – 29 March 1939, Britten aged 25)

1 Funeral march (Randall Swingler)

2 Scherzo – Dance of Death (W.H. Auden)

3 Recitative and Choral (Randall Swingler and W.H. Auden)

Dedication Montagu and Enid Slater

Britten on Record: Schubert – Die

Taubenpost; Der Einsame; An die

Laute; Harfenspieler I; Der

Musensohn; Du bist die Ruh;

Geheimes; Die Stadt

Britten on Record: Fauré: La

bonne chanson, Op. 61

A quick message…

Britten on Record: Schumann:

Liederkreis, Op.39

ArchivesMay 2014

April 2014

March 2014

February 2014

January 2014

December 2013

November 2013

October 2013

September 2013

August 2013

July 2013

June 2013

May 2013

April 2013

March 2013

February 2013

January 2013

CategoriesAround Britten in 80 songs (1)

BBC Proms (13)

Britten at the Barbican (2)

Britten from scratch (2)

Britten on Record (17)

Britten the performer (1)

Britten through the eyes of… (16)

Concert reviews (1)

Context (18)

Foundations (13)Do you need professional PDFs? Try PDFmyURL!

Text Randall Swingler and W.H. Auden as above

Language English

Duration 18’30″

Background and Critical Reception

Ballad of Heroes was written for the Festival of Music For The People, and was

conducted on its premiere by the composer Constant Lambert, who marshalled the

combined forces of the Co-Operative and Labour Choirs with the London Symphony

Orchestra.

As John Bridcut notes, the work is not an explicit vehicle for Britten’s pacifism – more to

honour British members of the International Brigade who had volunteered in the Spanish

Civil War of 1937, Auden among them.

Britten sets two texts each by Auden and Randall Swingler, compacted into a three

movement design that points towards the Sinfonia da Requiem. Paul Kildea describes his

setting of Auden’s Danse macabre as ‘a portent of what was to come if humans stood at

their doors, wiping their hands on their aprons, shrugging their shoulders at the descent

into war.

Several of Britten’s musical preoccupations return. The second movement is a

passacaglia, the first a funeral march – and while the text is softer death and war are still

the principal subjects. Yet despite these familiar templates Britten commentators see this

largely as a strong if slightly naive piece – except, that is, for Michael Kennedy, who

highlights the ‘glib response to the even more glib text’.

Thoughts

Ballad of Heroes is no shrinking violet. There is outright anger in this piece, tinged also

with a strong sense of uncertainty. This is likely to have been fuelled by the departure, a

Foundations (13)

Listening to Britten (344)

Arrangements and editions (4)

Brass ensemble (3)

Canticles (7)

Chamber music (35)

Solo instrument (8)

String Quartet (9)

Wind ensemble (3)

Chamber or string orchestra

(10)

Choir and orchestra (12)

Latin (1)

Choral (42)

Latin (1)

Church parable (3)

Film Score (13)

Folksong arrangements (57)

Incidental music (16)

Opera (21)

Operetta (2)

Orchestral (33)

Organ (1)

Piano (10)

Purcell realizations (42)

Radio score (12)

Scots (1)

Soloist with orchestra (10)

Song cycle / collection (25)

Songs (106)

English (83)

French (13)

German (2)

Italian (7)

Songs with orchestra (6)

Summaries (4)

Two pianos (2)

News (6)

Uncategorized (310)

Welcome and Introduction (1)

Do you need professional PDFs? Try PDFmyURL!

with a strong sense of uncertainty. This is likely to have been fuelled by the departure, a

month previously, of Auden and Isherwood for New York, not to mention the ever-

increasing hostilities felt across Europe and Britten’s fears for his own country.

The Dance of Death is the eye opener here. Using the demonic scherzo from King Arthur,

it adds Auden’s unforgettable text – ‘it’s farewell to the drawing room’s civilized cry’ – to

music simmering with resentment and indignation, the rat-a-tat of the strings

unmistakably like gunfire. It is a tremendous ‘moto perpetuo’, and the full force of

Britten’s anger is unleashed just over 2 minutes in. This is absolute confirmation that he

can serve large forces with immensely dramatic material, but also a reminder that said

material is unlikely to be comfortable to deal with!

Britten’s preoccupation with funeral marches continues to the first movement of the

piece – but this is a poignant piece of music, surprisingly similar in feel to the opening of

Elgar’s Dream of Gerontius – one of the few Elgar pieces Britten liked, whilst displaying

some of the harmonic traits then heard in later choral works.

The trumpet fanfares towards the end of the Choral provide the keenest anticipation yet

of the War Requiem, still 23 years away, and these are blended in with textures, a key

and an atmosphere that share similar feelings to Mahler’s Resurrection symphony.

It is surprising that Ballad of Heroes is not better known, although its length probably

prohibits regular concert performance, being neither a ‘main piece’ or a prelude. It is,

however, a very important piece in Britten’s output, for it shows the composer’s ambition

with large forms, but also his mastery of them to channel his feelings and responses to

text.

Recordings used

Robert Tear, City of Birmingham Symphony Chorus and Symphony Orchestra / Sir

Simon Rattle (EMI Classics)

Martyn Hill (tenor), London Symphony Chorus and Orchestra / Richard Hickox

MetaRegister

Log in

Entries RSS

Comments RSS

WordPress.com

Good Morning Britten

Good Morning Britten135LikeLike

Follow me on Twitter

Britten on Record: Haydn: Sonata for piano and violin in G major

Good Morning Britten @goodmorningbrit

Show Summary

Britten on Record: Schubert - Die Taubenpost; Der Einsame; An die Laute; Harfenspieler I; Der Musensohn; Du bist...

Good Morning Britten @goodmorningbrit

Show Summary

Britten on Record: Fauré: La bonne chanson, Op. 61

Good Morning Britten @goodmorningbrit

Show Summary

A quick message... fb.me/37GY1UQW7

Good Morning Britten @goodmorningbrit

Show Summary

Tweets

Do you need professional PDFs? Try PDFmyURL!

TweetTweet 2 2LikeLike

(Chandos)

Both Rattle and Hickox offer terrifically exciting versions, the latter being the most

expansive on his tempo choices, and this gives the music even more gravitas. Robert Tear

is excellent for the Recitative and Choral.

Spotify

This playlist brings together both available versions of Ballad of Heroes.

Also written in 1939: Rodrigo – Concierto de Aranjuez

Next up: The Sword in the Stone

Share this:

About these ads

Email Print

Do you need professional PDFs? Try PDFmyURL!

← Listening to Britten – Johnson Over Jordan Britten through the eyes of…Sandy Burnett →

This entry was posted in Choir and orchestra, English, Listening to Britten, Uncategorized and taggedBenjamin Britten, Constant Lambert, Randall Swingler, W.H. Auden. Bookmark the permalink.

One Response to Listening to Britten – Ballad ofHeroes, Op.14

Pingback: Britten and earworms | Good Morning Britten

Good Morning Britten

Like

One blogger likes this.

Related

Listening to Britten - An

introduction to Paul Bunyan

Listening to Britten - Our

Hunting Fathers, Op.8

Listening to Britten - Calypso

Leave a Reply

Enter your comment here...Enter your comment here...

The Twenty Ten Theme. Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Do you need professional PDFs? Try PDFmyURL!

FollowFollow

Do you need professional PDFs? Try PDFmyURL!