Butterworth reviews
Requiem: The Pity of War
James Rutherford performs songs by Butterworth
It’s good to see the growing international regard for British composers extended to the tragically unfulfilled George Butterworth. Not that conductor Kriss Russman is exactly foreign – Estonian-born but an alumnus of the Royal College of Music, Cambridge and the BBC Concert Orchestra. Nevertheless, his knowledge of and depth of feeling for this ill-fated Edwardian are striking.
Bryden Thomson conducts A Butterworth's Symphonies Nos 1, 2 & 4
Not George Butterworth, the English pastoralist; this is Arthur Butterworth (1923-2014), a British composer of northern landscapes, of moors, brisk winds, and wuthering heights. As these interwoven symphonies unfold in BBC radio performances from the 1970s and ’80s, taped off-air by Lyrita’s late founder Richard Itter, it’s easy enough to spot the influences: Sibelius and Nielsen, with spots of Bax’s Celtic mysteries and Vaughan Williams in barbed wire mode.
BBC National Orchestra of Wales play Butterworth
'This is powerful advocacy for one of British music's heroes'
Butterworth
The Banks of Green Willow Idyll; Six songs from 'A Shropshire Lad'*; A Shropshire Lad Rhapsody; Two English Idylls; Suite for string quartette; Love blows as the wind blows*; Orchestral fantasia (completed by Russman)
*James Rutherford (baritone); BBC National Orchestra of Wales/Kriss Russman
BIS BIS-2195
John Carol Case Sings Somervel, Butterworth & Elgar
The English Song Series Vol 20 - George Butterworth
Just a month after Mark Stone’s Complete Butterworth Songbook (reviewed in July) comes another collection from Roderick Williams, rapidly becoming the voice of this repertoire – and not without reason.
The Complete Butterworth Songbook
Butterworth, yet another World War I casualty, left orchestral compositions such as The Banks of Green Willow which suggest he might otherwise have rivalled his friend Vaughan Williams. His songs, though, also have a haunting, poignant quality that reflects the poet he set most, AE Housman – although, unlike some, he catches Housman’s sardonic edge, for example in ‘Think no more, lad’.