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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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                  I purchased Volume 1 of the complete C.W. Orr Songbook earlier this 
                  year and I was not especially or consistently impressed. I think 
                  that it was a possible combination of what gradually seemed 
                  like too much slow music in a similar mood, second-rate and 
                  occasionally uninspired settings some rather short and disconnected 
                  and some typos in the booklet. When volume two dropped onto 
                  my doormat I was not totally well disposed to it. Also Orr’s 
                  rather privileged background made me think that he was hopelessly 
                  out of touch with the ordinary country folk so often featured 
                  in the lines of his most often set poet, A.E. Housman. In addition 
                  a composer who only manages to write forty something songs and 
                  a few other trifles in a long lifetime seemed to me to lack 
                  a certain altruism, composing only on a personal whim for a 
                  small coterie of the converted.  
                     
                  With this second volume I have mostly completely revised these 
                  thoughts. Surely most composers write too much anyway and in 
                  fact why not write (as indeed I often have) for those whom you 
                  know directly and who appreciate your style and sensibilities. 
                  What does it matter if a composer has a favourite poet, a partnership 
                  can be formed even across the generations in which the meaning 
                  between the lines is conjured up by the melodies and harmonies 
                  allowing a greater depth of meaning to emerge. That is what 
                  C.W.Orr achieved in his handful of often miniature masterpieces. 
                   
                     
                  It is quite clear that Mark Stone’s approach is totally 
                  sympathetic. He clearly believes in this composer and subtly 
                  but determinedly sets about presenting each song on its own 
                  terms with understanding and clarity.  
                     
                  We start with Five Housman Songs written at various moments 
                  during the 1920s including ‘Is my team ploughing’ 
                  which emphasises, more than Butterworth’s famous setting, 
                  a sense of conversation and disillusion. The cycle opens with 
                  the gorgeous With Rue my heart is Laden composed in 
                  the south of France but redolent of a fading England.  
                     
                  It’s not all Housman. Indeed the earliest surviving Orr 
                  song of 1921 is a setting of a translation of an ancient Chinese 
                  poem Plucking the rushes with its rippling piano part 
                  and floaty melody. The variety found in this second Orr volume 
                  is exemplified by the fact that his very last song is also included. 
                  From 1957 comes Since then, O fondest and truest a poem 
                  by Bridges is set with noble grandiloquence. Sadly, it is, for 
                  me rather unmemorable and one of the few songs which I feel 
                  Mark Stone struggles with both technically and musically.  
                     
                  There is also a setting of James Joyce written for a compilation 
                  volume ‘The Joyce Book’ with thirteen composers 
                  represented including Ireland, Moean and Bliss. Orr’s 
                  piece is marked by a bell-like ostinato in the right hand piano 
                  part. It’s followed by Requiem the same text set 
                  over thirty years later by Herbert Howells on the death of President 
                  Kennedy, ‘Take him earth for Cherishing’ from Helen 
                  Waddell’s new at the time medieval Latin Lyrics and beloved 
                  of many composers. He dipped into it again for, what Mark Stone 
                  describes in his excellent booklet notes to each song as “a 
                  soporific” account of Prudentius’ poem in translation 
                  Hymn before Sleep and also for While summer on is 
                  sleeping which amazingly for such a seemingly English-feeling 
                  love-lyric comes from the Carmina Burana manuscript. 
                   
                     
                  With the last seven tacks we are back in the world of Housman. 
                  The song 1887 is an embarrassment. Mark Stone has taken 
                  Orr’s string piece ‘A Cotswold Hill tune’ 
                  and put words to it. He chose an early poem of Housman written 
                  for the Queen’s jubilee of 1887. It ends 
                  ‘And God will save the Queen’. Not only are words 
                  quite trite but also the music is unmemorable. This is all that 
                  is lacklustre about English music of the time. The following 
                  track In Valleys Green and still is Orr’s last 
                  Housman setting. By 1952 lads going off to die needlessly in 
                  war must have started to appear a little anachronistic. In addition 
                  I feel that Orr is just going through the motions here with 
                  something that no longer appears to be so deeply felt.  
                     
                  Finally there’s a group of Three Housman songs, 
                  which brings the set of two discs to an appropriate close. These 
                  come from the end of what I feel is his best period, the 1920s-1930s. 
                  Accompaniments are as important as melody, a comment that applies 
                  to most of these settings and the mood is always evocatively 
                  captured. Perhaps it’s Into my heart an air that kills 
                  that will be the one song I will most recall from these two 
                  discs.  
                     
                  It’s wonderful that Stone and Lepper, a true interweaving 
                  of two outstanding musicians, have brought these songs to light. 
                  If at times I have found their performances a little over earnest, 
                  the experience has been elevated by some magical moments as, 
                  for example, the end of Hymn Before Sleep.  
                     
                  No lover of English song should omit the purchasing of at least 
                  one of these two discs. I would suggest that this one is the 
                  more appealing choice.  
                     
                  Gary Higginson   
                   
                  See also review by John 
                  France   
                 
                  
                
 alternatively 
                   CD: MDT 
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