I know nothing of the method by which Ronald Corp composes but, 
                  as I implied in my review 
                  of his symphony and piano concerto, the music always sounds 
                  as if it flows naturally from him and he simply has to write 
                  it down. Perhaps this derives from the fact that, as a small 
                  child - as he reveals in his liner notes - he composed before 
                  he could really read or write music. So many composers seem 
                  hidebound by the writing of notes on the page and working out 
                  sequentially where to go next almost solely on what they see 
                  rather than hear. 
                    
                  Songs are conceived in a rather different way because an existing 
                  text is the starting point; but words can suggest music too 
                  if read with imagination, and Corp’s remarkable achievement 
                  here is that his settings, often of all-too-familiar poems, 
                  seem absolutely ‘right’ – and genuinely singable yet uninfluenced 
                  by existing settings of the same words by other composers. He 
                  understands the voice very well. 
                    
                  And yet Corp is not a revolutionary composer – evolutionary 
                  might be a more apt description. Although his concept of an 
                  individual poem may differ from other composers’ interpretations, 
                  Corp’s style acknowledges his debt particularly to those composers 
                  of the so-called English Musical Renaissance. I hear Parry, 
                  Quilter and Vaughan Williams in particular, but as accents of 
                  a distinctive voice of his own. 
                    
                  Corp has composed prolifically, so although this is the first 
                  time any of his songs has been commercially recorded, this disc 
                  contains by no means all of them. For instance, the series called 
                  ‘The Music of …’, represented here by his Housman and Whitman 
                  cycles, also includes settings of Michael Drayton, Keats, Byron, 
                  Yeats and ‘most of the famous poets’. Perhaps we may anticipate 
                  further recordings, covering more of these songs, some of which 
                  have an obbligato instrument in addition to the piano. 
                    
                  Corp destroyed most of his teenage compositions, with one exception, 
                  which is heard here: a setting of Tennyson’s ‘Break, break, 
                  break’, written in 1966. ‘I could not throw this song away’, 
                  he says. 
                    
                  The range of songs on this disc is wide, ranging in style ‘from 
                  art song to the more overtly humorous’. This includes songs 
                  he has written for children’s voices, but one would not guess 
                  this, listening to the performances here, for they sit quite 
                  comfortably side by side with the ‘grown-up’ pieces. 
                    
                  Much of the credit for this goes to the two performers, the 
                  baritone Mark Stone and the pianist Simon Lepper, both absolutely 
                  impeccable from beginning to end. My only criticism - and it’s 
                  a very mild one - is that Stone is sometimes rather too gentlemanly, 
                  and I feel could roughen his voice or be a bit more uninhibited 
                  when the words and music call for it. Something of what might 
                  have been is heard at the end of Corp’s setting of Harry Graham’s 
                  wonderful poem ‘The Bath’, which would make a very suitable 
                  encore, particularly in a programme of ‘songs on a watery theme’, 
                  which was the context for which it was originally written, at 
                  the request of the mezzo-soprano Catherine Hopper. 
                    
                  Here too are pieces by writers less commonly set to music, Byron 
                  and Mervyn Peake, but those that are more familiar, such as 
                  Housman, are represented by less familiar verse – ‘It nods and 
                  curtseys and recovers’, ‘Now hollow fires burn out to black’ 
                  and ‘Stone, steel, dominions pass’, for example. ‘I also wanted 
                  the music to be a little abrasive because I felt that some past 
                  settings of Housman had veered, to their detriment, towards 
                  the genteel’, says the composer. ‘Housman’s irony and gritty 
                  pessimism’ (as Geoffrey Bush once described it) can be difficult 
                  to capture but Corp does, I think, succeed in doing so. 
                    
                  The only song I would not care to hear again, despite the advocacy 
                  of composer and performers, is Colin Coppen’s ‘Give to my eyes, 
                  Lord’: long lines and six seemingly endless verses of it. And 
                  yet, it is apparently popular enough for the Oxford University 
                  Press to publish it in versions for children’s choirs, adult 
                  choirs, and as a solo song – as on this disc. A purely personal 
                  view, but I feel Corp becomes a trifle sentimental, here and 
                  elsewhere, when faced with religious texts of a certain sort. 
                  The choral versions, with their greater scope for varied vocal 
                  colour and texture, are perhaps more palatable. 
                    
                  But the strength of this disc lies in the three song cycles, 
                  by Whitman and Housman and Flower of Cities, an anthology 
                  of London poems by Dunbar, Byron, Wordsworth, Blake and Henry 
                  Carey, which opens the programme. This and The Music of Housman 
                  include a Corp characteristic: a ‘reprise’ – a modified repeat 
                  of the opening, giving a sense of unity to the cycle. 
                    
                  The most substantial item, the Whitman cycle, is very fine, 
                  and although written in 1973 this is not only its first recording 
                  but in fact its first performance, which rather shocks me, for 
                  I am certain that the composer gave me a copy of this work sometime 
                  in the 1970s which for some reason I never sang and subsequently 
                  appear to have lost. I feel very foolish and very, very ashamed. 
                  
                    
                  There are thirty-nine songs on this disc and it is a tribute 
                  to all involved that interest very seldom wanes. More please. 
                  
                    
                
Garry Humphreys 
                    
                  
                    
                  www.garryhumphreys.com