Label: Challenge Classics
Format: CD
Barcode: 0608917252729
Catalog number: CC 72527
Releasedate: 08-11-11
Format: CD
Barcode: 0608917252729
Catalog number: CC 72527
Releasedate: 08-11-11
Besides the familiar, well-known repertoire, Robbert Muuse and Micha van Weers challenge themselves to continuously explore the field of unknown works, forgotten or even forbidden songs that they deem worthy to be re-discovered and performed as new. This research led to their present collection of approximately 80 songs by Cyril Scott, that have unjustly remained unknown to our generation.
- Besides the familiar, well-known repertoire, Robbert Muuse and Micha van Weers challenge themselves to continuously explore the field of unknown works
- As a soloist and interpretator of baroque music, Robbert Muuse has sung many oratorios and concerts
- Micha van Weers has earned several prices like the Audience Prize and the Special RAI-Prize at the Int. Seghizzi Song Competition in Italy; the MeesPierson Award in the Amsterdam Concertgebouw
- As a concertsinger, Robbert Muuse sang many concert works and oratorios, in concert halls throughout Europe, the U.S.A. and in Israel
- He worked with conductors Paul Goodwin, Christoph Poppen, Jan Willem de Vriend (with Combattimento Consort Amsterdam), Jos van Veldhoven (The Netherlands Bach Society), and Frédéric Desenclos of the Ensemble Pierre Robert (France)
Music history is often unfair to composers. Following his studies in Germany, Cyril Scott became known as the leader of the so-called “Frankfurt Group” of five British composers, including Percy Grainger and Roger Quilter, who “stood apart in outlook and education from the mainstream of the conservative British musical establishment”. Overall, he was a major figure in helping Britain to break away from Austro-Germanic musical hegemony. The famous conductor and composer Eugene Goossens even called him “The Father of Modern British Music;. Much to his own frustration, however, Scott became especially known as a successful composer of innumerable; short songs and piano pieces rather than for his serious compositions. By and large, he produced these;, as he called them, due to a contract that he signed with Elkin in 1904 and I suspect that the fact that he composed only four songs after 1930 had much to do with the ending of this arrangement. Ultimately, the main reasons for Scott’s dropping out from the British music establishment were his musical modernism and, in particular, his fascination with Occultism and Eastern philosophy, which increasingly influenced his musical style. By the 1940s, then, this cosmopolitan composer-pianist was everything but forgotten, though he would continue to compose and, indeed, to write numerous esoteric books, including his most famous Music: Its Secret Influence Throughout the Ages (1933), until the end of his life. No doubt, the revival of interest in Scott’s music during recent decades finally does justice to this remarkable, albeit somewhat eccentric, composer.
Conversely, for a long time in music history, the dominant image of Ralph Vaughan Williams has been that of an English nationalist ‘folksong’ composer. Yet, he never claimed that his collecting of English folksongs, which he began in 1903, liberated his muse and by 1918, in fact, he had largely abandoned composition based on folksong. Furthermore, ironically, the piece that overall established “the supposed high priest of the pastoral” as a musical spokesman of the nation, A London Symphony (1913), was a tribute to what was then the world’s largest city! Likewise, his A Pastoral Symphony (1921) was inspired originally by the landscape of wartime France and not, as generally understood, by that of peacetime England. Fortunately, since recent research has challenged many of the myths surrounding Vaughan Williams’ oeuvre, there now is emerging an image of a distinct modernist composer, who commanded a wide range of musical styles.
Besides the familiar, well-known repertoire, Robbert Muuse and Micha van Weers challenge themselves to continuously explore the field of unknown works, forgotten or even forbidden songs that they deem worthy to be re-discovered and performed as new. This research led to their present collection of approximately 80 songs by Cyril Scott, that have unjustly remained unknown to our generation.
Conversely, for a long time in music history, the dominant image of Ralph Vaughan Williams has been that of an English nationalist ‘folksong’ composer. Yet, he never claimed that his collecting of English folksongs, which he began in 1903, liberated his muse and by 1918, in fact, he had largely abandoned composition based on folksong. Furthermore, ironically, the piece that overall established “the supposed high priest of the pastoral” as a musical spokesman of the nation, A London Symphony (1913), was a tribute to what was then the world’s largest city! Likewise, his A Pastoral Symphony (1921) was inspired originally by the landscape of wartime France and not, as generally understood, by that of peacetime England. Fortunately, since recent research has challenged many of the myths surrounding Vaughan Williams’ oeuvre, there now is emerging an image of a distinct modernist composer, who commanded a wide range of musical styles.
Besides the familiar, well-known repertoire, Robbert Muuse and Micha van Weers challenge themselves to continuously explore the field of unknown works, forgotten or even forbidden songs that they deem worthy to be re-discovered and performed as new. This research led to their present collection of approximately 80 songs by Cyril Scott, that have unjustly remained unknown to our generation.
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1Song of London, op. 52, no. 101:42
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2Blackbird?s Song, op. 52, no. 302:57
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3Sundown03:19
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4To-Morrow02:02
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5Water-Lilies01:52
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6Time O?Day (O. Macnaghten) (1919)01:29
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7Ballad of Fair Helen of Kirkconnel, op. 803:58
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8Picnic, op. 46, no. 202:22
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9An Eastern Lament, op. 62, no. 302:07
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10A Song of Wine, op. 46, no. 302:34
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11Prelude, op. 57, no.101:42
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12Have Ye Seen Him Pass By?02:47
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13The Huckster01:45
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14Five Mystical SongsEaster04:32
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15Five Mystical SongsLove bade me welcome05:09
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16Songs of TravelThe Vagabond03:08
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17Songs of TravelLet beauty awake01:58
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18Songs of TravelThe Roadside Fire02:22
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19Songs of TravelYouth and Love03:30
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20Songs of TravelIn Dreams02:29
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21Songs of TravelThe infinite shining heavens02:22
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22Songs of TravelWhither must I wander04:16
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23Songs of TravelBright is the ring of words02:02
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24Songs of TravelI have trod the upward and the downward slope02:18