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Track(s) taken from CDD22026

Black Stitchel

First line:
As I was lying on Black Stitchel
composer
author of text

Michael George (bass), Clifford Benson (piano)
Recording details: April 1987
Seldon Hall, Haberdashers' Aske's School, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom
Produced by Paul Spicer
Engineered by Antony Howell
Release date: March 1988
Total duration: 2 minutes 19 seconds
 

Other recordings available for download

Christopher Maltman (baritone), Joseph Middleton (piano)
Ivor Gurney fought at the Front in 1916, was wounded on Good Friday 1917, and after a spell at Rouen Hospital was gassed at Passchendaele. He was sent to a number of war hospitals where, deprived of the friendship of his fellow soldiers, he suffered increasing mood swings. He threatened suicide in June 1918, was discharged from the army a month before the Armistice, and returned to Gloucester. His first book of poems, Severn and Somme (1917), published during the war, was followed by War’s Embers (1919). While writing poetry, he continued to compose, and published two Housman cycles, Ludlow and Teme and The Western Playland, in 1919. His mind soon gave way; his family first committed him in 1922 to Barnwood House Asylum and then to the City of London Mental Hospital in Dartford. He died of pulmonary tuberculosis at the City of London Mental Hospital in 1937. Black Stitchel (1920) is the most successful of his nine settings of the poems of Wilfred Gibson, the Northumberland poet who moved to London in 1912, where he rented a room above Harold Monro’s Poetry Bookshop. Each of the four stanzas mentions a different wind: South wind for happiness, West wind for love, North wind for wrath, East wind for pity. The pastoral mood of the first two stanzas turns dark in the third by means of restless, più animato harmonies, and the music of the final lines is perhaps the most plaintive in all Gurney.

from notes by Richard Stokes © 2019

Other albums featuring this work

The Soldier
Studio Master: SIGCD592Download onlyStudio Master FLAC & ALAC downloads available
War's Embers
CDH55237Last few CD copies remaining
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