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 Charles Wilfred ORR (1893-1976) 
               
              The Complete C.W. Orr Songbook - Volume 2  
              Five Songs from A Shropshire Lad: With rue my heart is laden, 
              This time of year, Oh, when I was in love with you, Is my team ploughing?, 
              On your midnight pallet lying (1924-6) [12:09]  
              Plucking the rushes (1921) [1:43]  
              Four Songs: Bahnhofstrasse; Requiem, The time of roses, Since thou, 
              O fondest and truest, (1932-57) [12:16]  
              Hymn before sleep (1953) [4:32]  
              While summer on is sleeping (1953) [2:30]  
              The lads in their hundreds (1936) [2:51]  
              The Isle of Portland (1938) [3:30]  
              1887 (?) [4:38]  
              In valleys green and still (1952) [3:57]  
              Three Songs from A Shropshire Lad: Into my heart an air that 
              kills, Westward on the high-hilled plains, Oh see how thick the 
              goldcup flowers (1935-29) [11:38]  
                
              Mark Stone (baritone); Simon Lepper (piano)  
              rec. Potton Hall, Suffolk, 5-6 November 2011  
                
              STONE RECORDS 5060192780192 [59:52] 
             
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                It does not seem long ago since I reviewed Volume 
                  1 of this most desirable CD production. In fact, it was 
                  only March of this year. I am delighted that the second volume 
                  has followed so rapidly: often these projects get a wee bit 
                  bogged down in cash-flow matters and time-scales. However, the 
                  present CD concludes what is an exceptionally valuable and important 
                  programme of English song. Let us be honest: if C.W. Orr had 
                  been called ‘Henri Duparc’ there would probably 
                  have been over a hundred discs devoted to his music. As it is, 
                  there are only odd songs in remote corners of song recital CDs 
                  (review 
                  review). 
                  The ‘Complete Songs of C.W. Orr’ will probably be 
                  the one and only ‘complete’ survey of Orr’s 
                  vocal music in my lifetime. Yet these songs are not only important, 
                  they are often beautiful examples of the genre.  
                     
                  Twelve out of nineteen songs are settings of texts by Alfred 
                  Edward Housman. The disc opens with the important Five Songs 
                  from ‘A Shropshire Lad’. These include ‘With 
                  rue my heart is laden’, ‘This time of year’, 
                  ‘Oh, when I was in love with you’, ‘Is my 
                  team ploughing’ and ‘On your midnight pallet lying’. 
                  They were composed between 1924-26 and were published a couple 
                  of years later. However, they were not issued as a collection 
                  until 1959. It is fair to say that they are not a ‘song-cycle’ 
                  but a set of songs that benefit from being sung together and 
                  in the order presented.  
                     
                  Perhaps the finest song in this group is ‘Is my team ploughing?’ 
                  It is hard to forget the RVW and Butterworth settings of this 
                  text; however, Orr does not try to parody these. There is always 
                  a danger that this poem can sound a little banal - especially 
                  with the line ‘The goal stands up, the keeper/Stands up 
                  to keep the goal’ eschewed by Vaughan Williams. Orr has 
                  managed to create a sound-world that explores the depth of the 
                  poem rather than the detail.  
                     
                  The other song that stood out for me was ‘On your midnight 
                  pallet lying’ which reflects the thoughts of a young man 
                  about to leave his lover and join his comrades setting out for 
                  war. Its mood sums up the depressing thoughts of the soldier. 
                   
                     
                  Arthur Waley (1889-1966) was a well-known ‘Orientalist’ 
                  who taught himself Japanese and Chinese. He published many books 
                  including a number of volumes of poetry in translation. ‘Plucking 
                  the Rushes’ was first published in the 1918 collection 
                  of 170 Chinese Poems. The song is remarkable for its 
                  attractive melody and unexpected chromatic twists. The setting 
                  is Orr’s earliest surviving song.  
                     
                  For his ‘Four Songs’ (1959) Orr turned his attention 
                  to a wide variety of poets. The first is ‘Bahnhofstrasse’ 
                  by James Joyce (1882-1941). This was the composer’s contribution 
                  to the ‘Joyce Book’ which comprised settings by 
                  various hands of 13 poems from the poet’s volume Pomes 
                  Pennyeach. Joyce suffered from his first attack of glaucoma 
                  on Zurich’s Bahnhofstrasse. The poem is a reaction to 
                  a realisation that ‘youth was behind him, but that he 
                  had yet to obtain the sagacity of old age.’ This, to my 
                  mind, is one of the best of Orr’s songs: it is an ideal 
                  musical evocation of the poem’s sentiment.  
                     
                  Helen Waddell (1889-1965) is justly famous for her translation 
                  of ‘Medieval Latin Lyrics’ published in 1929 and 
                  still in print. The liner-notes point out that the words ‘Take, 
                  him, earth for cherishing’ are best-known in Herbert Howells’ 
                  choral setting in memory of John F. Kennedy. However, Orr’s 
                  1954 song is equally moving and once again reflects on the composer’s 
                  sense of his own mortality. This is a powerful song that is 
                  both introverted and lugubrious. The original Latin text was 
                  written by the Christian poet Prudentius.  
                     
                  Thomas Hood (1799-1845) provides the words for ‘The time 
                  of roses’. It is one of the more optimistic settings on 
                  this CD, although the words can be interpreted as being more 
                  depressing than the music would suggest.  
                     
                  Robert Bridges (1844-1930) is a poet who is largely ignored 
                  today, in spite of the fact he was Poet Laureate. ‘Since 
                  thou, O fondest and truest’ was Orr’s final song. 
                  I must admit that it is hard work to listen to: I would love 
                  to be able to appreciate and enjoy this work being the composer’s 
                  last ‘word’ on song-composition; however, I find 
                  it too miserable and dirge-like.  
                     
                  Two other settings from Helen Waddell translations are included 
                  on this CD. The first is the withdrawn ‘Hymn before Sleep’, 
                  also translated from Prudentius. ‘While summer on is sleeping', 
                  taken from the Benediktbeuern Manuscript, is the easiest on 
                  the mind in this present collection. The text is drawn from 
                  the same source as Carl Orff’s well-known Carmina burana. 
                  It is a simple, if passionate, love song that does not end in 
                  tragedy or too much despair.  
                     
                  It is difficult to get George Butterworth’s setting of 
                  ‘The lads in their hundreds’ out of one’s 
                  head when reading Housman’s text. It is a problem that 
                  Orr faced when he wrote this song some twenty-five years later. 
                  The liner-notes point out that Butterworth’s is a strophic 
                  setting whereas Orr has applied melodic development. I prefer 
                  the earlier number.  
                     
                  ‘The Isle of Portland’ is a ‘sea-scape’ 
                  for singer and piano. The accompanist plays a rocking barcarolle 
                  that suggests the ‘star-filled seas are smooth tonight’. 
                  However, the song does become more animated as the singer reflects 
                  on the fact that ‘Far from his folk a dead lad lies.’ 
                  It has to be recalled that prisoners were sent to Portland to 
                  quarry stone as penal labour. It was a dangerous occupation. 
                     
                  I am baffled by the inclusion of a song called ‘1887’. 
                  OK, it is a confection. C.W. Orr’s only offering for the 
                  orchestra is the short but near-perfect Cotswold Hill Tune 
                  (review 
                  review). 
                  This was originally composed for string orchestra in 1937. In 
                  this present CD it has been ‘arranged’ as a song 
                  compassing the words of A.E. Housman’s poem From ‘Clee 
                  to heaven the beacon burns’. It is a great poem - there 
                  is no doubt about that. The poet contrasts the celebrations 
                  for Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee in 1887, with thoughts 
                  about the fallen in a variety of ‘colonial wars’. 
                  There is nothing fundamentally wrong with this ‘song’ 
                  it just appears to my mind to have been forced into the mould 
                  of the little tone poem. I guess that it only appears as a makeweight 
                  to bring the CD duration up to nearly the hour mark. It should 
                  be promptly forgotten.  
                     
                  ‘In valleys green and still’ was the last of C.W. 
                  Orr’s Housman settings. In many ways, I feel that it is 
                  one of his best. Like much of the poet’s output, this 
                  poem meditates on the theme of soldiers going to war. It is 
                  an involved number that sounds just a little bit awkward for 
                  the voice. The piano part is quite minimalist, creating an unfocused 
                  mood.  
                     
                  The final three tracks on this CD are settings of Housman’s 
                  poems. These ‘Three Songs from ‘A Shropshire Lad’’ 
                  were published as a group in 1940. However, they were written 
                  over a period of some five years. The first, ‘Into my 
                  heart and air that kills’ was composed in 1935. It makes 
                  an interesting song-form being a set of variations on the melodic 
                  phrase from the first line. It is a deeply moving setting that 
                  expresses the mood of anyone ‘away from the place they 
                  love’.  
                     
                  The liner-notes explain that Orr’s setting of ‘Westward 
                  on the high-hilled plains’ reflects the composer’s 
                  yearning for his ‘old life’. The poem itself is 
                  construed as an elderly man looking at someone much younger 
                  and reflecting on the dichotomy between ‘plus ça 
                  change’ and the continuity of existence between generations 
                  (vide ‘On Wenlock Edge’). It is not a setting that 
                  immediately appeals, but repeated hearing reveals the song’s 
                  character and ultimate strength. The piano part is powerful 
                  and essential to the song’s success. The final song in 
                  this group ‘Oh see how thick the goldcup flowers’ 
                  was composed in 1939. It is another example of Housman meditating 
                  of the transience of time and the need to ‘seize the moment’. 
                   
                     
                  With the exception of ‘1887’ (noted above), I relished 
                  this CD. As I noted in my review of Volume I it is great to 
                  hear a number songs by Orr that have eluded me for many years. 
                  The two soloists give a sterling performance of all (most) of 
                  these numbers that is both sympathetic and enthusiastic. It 
                  is obvious to any listener that Mark Stone and Simon Lepper 
                  both have a deep understanding of the words and music of these 
                  songs.  
                     
                  As with the previous volume, the liner-notes are helpful and 
                  are required reading before approaching the music. The format 
                  of each song having its own little mini-programme note has been 
                  maintained. The text of the song is included. Part II of the 
                  essay Charles Wilfred Orr: The Unsung Hero of English Song 
                  is presented as a preface to the notes.  
                     
                  I guess that I would have enjoyed a little bit of variety in 
                  these songs - a mezzo-soprano perhaps. However, this is an album 
                  to sample - not to through-listen. Much of the music is melancholic 
                  and could become a touch depressing if listened to end-to-end. 
                  These songs need to be approached no more than three or four 
                  at a time. However, there is much here to listen to, to think 
                  about and ultimately to enjoy.  
                     
                  John France   
                   
                 
                 
                 
                 
             
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