Rutland Boughton is 
                better known for his music dramas, such 
                as the Immortal Hour and Bethlehem, 
                than for song, but was nonetheless both 
                a prolific and a skilled song composer. 
                The British Music Society has here compiled 
                a selection of some pleasing examples, 
                sympathetically performed by mezzo-soprano 
                Louise Mott accompanied by Alexander 
                Taylor. 
              
 
              
It is important to 
                understand - as Michael Hurd points 
                out in his excellent sleeve notes - 
                that Boughton did not choose his texts 
                for beauty of language, inherent musicality 
                or poetic expression. He set poems for 
                their message (usually political), using 
                texts that expressed particular ideals 
                – often feminist and socialist sentiments. 
                Boughton does not, therefore, offer 
                us further settings of the Shakespeare, 
                Housman, Tennyson, Blake, Rossetti and 
                Hardy poems, but brings us the socialist 
                Edward Carpenter, William Sharp, the 
                suffragette Mary Richardson, and Boughton’s 
                rather feminist partner Christina Walshe. 
              
 
              
The disc opens with 
                four songs with texts from Edward Carpenter’s 
                Towards Democracy. Mott’s voice 
                is fairly operatic, which is perfect 
                for the dramatic To Freedom and 
                Fly Messenger, and, although 
                she manages suitable gentleness and 
                poignancy in the later A Song of 
                Taking and Sweet Ass, I do 
                not, however, find her quite delicate 
                enough in the tender The Dead Christ. 
                Five Celtic Lovesongs ensue, with words 
                by Fiona Macleod (William Sharp – whose 
                play Boughton adapted to form the libretto 
                of The Immortal Hour), and then 
                the intense Songs of Womanhood 
                by Christina Walshe. Three further songs 
                from Towards Democracy follow, 
                before the Symbol Songs, setting 
                the poems of Mary Richardson. Amongst 
                these, the upbeat Honeysuckle 
                particularly delighted me – its liveliness 
                and syncopation setting it slightly 
                apart from the other songs, which have 
                a little bit of tendency to sound fairly 
                similar. The disc concludes with a setting 
                of Eleanor Farjeon’s Sweet Ass. 
              
 
              
The fact that the texts 
                have been picked for ideological reasons 
                rather than artistic ones stands out. 
                Boughton set himself a hard task by 
                choosing poems that do not lend themselves 
                to music, and are far from easy words 
                to set - the word-setting is consequently 
                a far cry from the natural flow of Finzi, 
                Quilter or Britten. Yet the songs are 
                still original, dramatic, striking and 
                occasionally invested with some of the 
                magic that pervades Immortal Hour 
                (the New Madonna, for example, 
                inhabits a similar world). The fact 
                that I found myself humming some of 
                the songs the day after I’d listened 
                to the disc is, I believe, a good sign! 
              
 
              
Louise Mott has a lovely 
                voice, warm and characterful, with excellent 
                enunciation and a good sense of drama, 
                although I found her vibrato a little 
                too excessive on occasions. Alexander 
                Taylor is a sensitive accompanist, although 
                the piano is slightly too prominent 
                – the balance a little too skewed towards 
                the piano and away from the singer. 
              
 
              
The BMS have excelled 
                themselves here in a beautiful production. 
                The disc contains some charming songs, 
                well performed and brilliantly presented 
                in a highly professional, attractive 
                layout with full and clear sleeve-notes. 
                Congratulations, BMS! 
              
Em Marshall  
              
see also review 
                by Rob 
                Barnett