A Birthday Hansel

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A Birthday Hansel, Op. 92, is a song cycle for 'high voice' and harp composed by Benjamin Britten and set to texts by Robert Burns. [1] The last song cycle that Britten wrote, it was composed in honour of the Queen Mother's 75th birthday, at the request of her daughter, Elizabeth II. [2] [3] (The Queen Mother was patron of the Aldeburgh Festival.) [4]

Composed in March 1975, [4] [5] the piece was given its debut performance in January 1976 by Britten's life partner Peter Pears and harpist Osian Ellis. [2] It was the last piece which Britten wrote for Pears, and one of his very last works.

In recognition of the Queen Mother's Scottish ancestry, Britten chose seven poems by Burns, sung in the Scots language, and performed without a break. 'Hansel' is a Scots word meaning welcome gift or present. At Britten's request, Colin Matthews arranged four of the songs for voice and piano; these were published separately as Four Burns Songs in 1978. [2]

Songs

The songs are: [6]

  1. "Birthday Song"
  2. "My Early Walk"
  3. "Wee Willie Gray"
  4. "My Hoggie"
  5. "Afton Water"
  6. "The Winter"
  7. "Leezie Lindsay"

A complete performance takes about 18 minutes. [7]

Musicologist Peter Evans has analysed the cycle. It is through-composed, with the harp supplying transitions from the mood of one poem to the next. As befits a birthday gift, it does not attempt to point out morals nor to invite deep reflection. The songs do not explicitly utilise Scottish musical forms, but are flavoured by echoes of them. Although the texts are all by a single poet, the cycle does not have a sense of the cumulative illumination of the poet's creative character as is found in other such cycles by Britten. It is "delightful but undemanding". [5]

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  1. XVI: "Si come nella penna e nell'inchiostro"
  2. XXXI: "A che più debb'io mai l'intensa voglia"
  3. XXX: "Veggio co' bei vostri occhi un dolce lume"
  4. LV: "Tu sa, ch'io so, signor mie, che tu sai"
  5. XXXVIII: "Rendete agli occhi miei, o fonte o fiume"
  6. XXXII: "S'un casto amor, s'una pietà superna"
  7. XXIV: "Spirto ben nato, in cui si specchia e vede"

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Songs from the Chinese is a song cycle for soprano or tenor and guitar composed in 1957 by Benjamin Britten (1913–76), and published as his Op. 58. It consists of settings of six poems translated from the original Chinese by Arthur Waley (1889–1966). It was written for, and first performed by, the tenor Peter Pears and the guitarist Julian Bream.

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Canticle IV: The Journey of the Magi, Op. 86, is a composition for three male solo voices and piano by Benjamin Britten, part of his series of five Canticles. It sets the text of T. S. Eliot's poem "Journey of the Magi", retelling the story of the biblical Magi. The work was premiered in June 1971 at the Aldeburgh Festival by James Bowman, Peter Pears and John Shirley-Quirk, with Britten as the pianist. It was published the following year, dedicated to the three singers.

References

  1. Walter Bernhart; Werner Wolf; David L. Mosley (2001). Word and Music Studies: Essays on the Song Cycle and on Defining the Field : Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Word and Music Studies at Ann Arbor, MI, 1999. Rodopi. pp. 224–. ISBN   978-90-420-1575-3 . Retrieved 7 October 2012.
  2. 1 2 3 "A Birthday Hansel". Britten-Pears Foundation.
  3. "Liner notes to Who Are These Children?". eclassical.com.
  4. 1 2 Carpenter, Humphrey (1992). Benjamin Britten: A Biography. Faber and Faber. p. 572. ISBN   0-571-14324-5.
  5. 1 2 Evans, Peter (1979). The Music of Benjamin Britten. London, Melbourne and Toronto: J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd. pp. 392–394, 414, 415. ISBN   0-460-04350-1.
  6. "A Birthday Hansel". lieder.net. Retrieved 13 October 2017.
  7. Benjamin Britten A Birthday Hansel, song cycle for tenor & harp, Op. 92 at AllMusic . Retrieved 13 October 2017.