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Hyperion Records

To Gratiana dancing and singing
First line:
See! with what constant motion
composer
February 1913
author of text
Recordings
Cover of 'Vaughan Williams: Songs of Travel; Butterworth: A Shropshire Lad' (CDA67378)
Cover of 'War's Embers' (CDD22026)
Cover of 'War's Embers' (CDH55237)
Cover of 'A Treasury of English Song' (HYP30)
A Treasury of English Song
This album is not yet available for download HYP30  Super-budget price sampler — Deleted  
Details
Track 21 on CDD22026 CD2 [4'15] 2CDs Dyad (2 for the price of 1) — 2CDs Archive Service Only
Track 26 on CDH55237 [4'15] Helios (Hyperion's budget label)
Track 32 on HYP30 [4'12] Super-budget price sampler — Deleted
To Gratiana dancing and singing
Browne’s best-known song, To Gratiana dancing and singing, setting words by Richard Lovelace, was composed in February 1913 for his friend, the tenor Steuart Wilson, and is one of the most beautiful creations in the entire repertoire of twentieth-century English song. The influence of Elizabethan music is apparent: the melody that forms the accompaniment is an anonymous seventeenth-century Allmayne in Elizabeth Rogers’s Virginal Book, which the composer heard in a 1908 while acting in a university production of Milton’s Comus. Over the sonorous, rich chords of the piano, treading the measure of the Allmayne, the vocal line curves and soars in ecstatic wonder at Gratiana’s performance.

from notes by Andrew Burn © 2003

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