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A Little Nonsense Ronald BINGE (1910-1979)
The Story of Cock Robin [6:16]
The Grand Old Duke [3:21] TRADITIONAL
Oranges and Lemons [1:48]
Doctor Foster (arr. Herbert Hughes orch. Cyril Watters) [1:13]
The Jolly Beggar (arr. Victor Hely-Hutchinson) [1:55]
A Good Roarin' Fire [0:46]
The Great Meat Pie [1:54]
The Harrin' Heed [1:55] J Michael DIACK
Sing a Song of Sixpence (arr. Mackerras) [2:20]
Little Jack Horner (arr. Mackerras) [2:05]
Jack and Jill (arr. Mackerras) [1:56] Liza LEHMANN (1862-1918)
Matilda - (arr. Mackerras) [2:59]
Henry King (arr. Mackerras) [3:00] Victor HELY-HUTCHINSON (1901-1947)
Old Mother Hubbard (rearranged Mackerras) [2:39]
The Owl and the Pussy Cat [1:58]
The Table and the Chair [2:10]
The Duck and the Kangaroo [2:37]
Owen Brannigan
(bass-baritone)
Pro Arte Orchestra/Charles Mackerras
rec. EMI Studio No.1, London, January 1962 DECCA 442
9077 [41:51]
Back in January 1962, with
Ronald Kinloch Anderson in the recording box and Abbey Road
Studio No.1 at the ready, Owen Brannigan recorded these seventeen “nonsense” songs
for EMI. At hand and conducting was Charles Mackerras who
also came armed with some arrangements. Together they performed
orchestral settings of Edward Lear’s Nonsense Songs, two
of Belloc’s Cautionary Tales and four Handel parodies to
nursery rhyme words. Some of Ronald Binge’s fantasies on
children’s songs, as well as songs by Herbert Hughes and
Victor Hely-Hutchinson, were added to the mix. And there
were also some unaccompanied songs, a favourite province
of Brannigan’s.
Forty-five years later
they’re issued by Decca (apparently exclusively for Australia),
which has reprinted the original LP cover and sleeve notes
in a
fetching
and
graphically
attractive
way. It’s true that the results last barely forty-two minutes
but at least you know what you’re getting with this straight
remastering.
You’re also getting wit,
whimsy and some saucy fun. Nothing diminishes the pleasure
especially, for me, the Handel parodies which I suppose should
pall – but don’t. It’s Binge who emerges as something of
a hero for his The Story of Cock Robin, a six minute
scena of riotous fun. Portentous and sporting a recitative,
habaņera and romantic aria, a “Death of Nelson” type recit
is thrown in for good measure. It gets things off to a blisteringly
enjoyable start. Doctor Foster gives Brannigan the
chance to exhibit his Handelian divisions whilst J Michael
Diack and Charles Mackerras concoct a veritable Handel-Beecham
extravaganza in Sing a Song of Sixpence. Naturally Little
Jack Horner is similarly despatched but the funniest
parody is undoubtedly Jack and Jill. One appreciates
that these kinds of things are not to everyone’s taste – and
I think those beyond the Sceptred Isle will probably find
it all baffling – but they’re very much to mine. So too is
Brannigan’s descriptive and distinguished way with unaccompanied
songs.
The perplexed will be find
the vaguely Eastern and Mahlerian hues – no, honestly – of Henry
King even more of a puzzler though even they might approve
of the delightfully arch Hely-Hutchinson setting of The
Table and the Chair.
It would be a pity is this
kind of disc mouldered away in the “Humour” racks. It had
life then and it has life now. I didn’t like all of it – but
I did like a lot of it.