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Benjamin Britten wrote songs throughout his life, starting at age 14 (
Quatre chansons françaises) and ranging from his settings of English and French folk songs (represented here by two in each language) to longer and more complex works. The centerpiece of the disc (apart from the early and very Schoenbergian Sinfonietta op. 1) is the five-part song cycle
Our Hunting Fathers. The cycle, written in 1936, was devised by W.H. Auden and reflects in obscure and disjointed fashion the polemical pacifism of the time. The episodes alternate between drama and lyricism and are generally more declamatory than melodic, using the kind of heightened speech sometimes termed sprechstimme. The settings and orchestration are strong and imaginative, and the result is very effective. Ian Bostridge (whose recording of
Schubert Lieder is not to be missed) has a beautiful voice: silvery, sweet, expressive, and capable of considerable dramatic impact. His articulation in English is impeccable, less so in French (those lazy vowels!), and while his interpretations sometimes seem a little overrefined, that's the nature of the music itself. Daniel Harding and the Britten Sinfonia provide excellent accompaniments, and the sound is very good. An interesting recital, especially for Britten fans.
--Alex Morin