Delius - Appalachia, Song of the High Hills
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Label: Chandos
Cat No: CHSA5088
Format: Hybrid SACD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Vocal/Choral
Release Date: 28th March 2011
Contents
Artists
Olivia Robinson (soprano)Christopher Bowen (tenor)
Andrew Rupp (baritone)
BBC Symphony Chorus
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Conductor
Sir Andrew DavisWorks
A Song of the High HillsAppalachia 'Variations on an Old Slave Song'
Artists
Olivia Robinson (soprano)Christopher Bowen (tenor)
Andrew Rupp (baritone)
BBC Symphony Chorus
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Conductor
Sir Andrew DavisAbout
In Appalachia, the sombre mood reflects the fate that overcame many black slaves along the Mississippi River, who were sold by one cotton planter to another, simply uprooted from loved ones, and transported to a different place – the practice is the origin of the expression ‘being sold down the river’. The inspiration for the work came to Delius when he was working on an orange plantation in Florida as a young man, and from across the water in the distance heard the singing of black farm labourers. Many years later, Delius recollected: ‘they showed a truly wonderful sense of musicianship and harmonic resource in which they treated a melody, and hearing their singing in such romantic surroundings it was then and there that I first felt the urge to express myself in music.’
Setting an anonymous slave song, Delius expresses the human tragedy that unfolds in it initially through the full chorus in unaccompanied song. The orchestra steals in to reflect on the suffering before the baritone sings and the chorus responds. Rising to its climax, the music suggests hope and human dignity triumphing over adversity; the music of the introduction returns and the vision poignantly fades as the ship with its dispossessed slaves sails downstream and disappears from sight.
The inspiration for The Song of the High Hills was the mountains of Norway, which Delius regarded as his spiritual home. In 1911, he started composing the tone poem in which he sought to capture the impression created by a still summer night in the Norwegian mountains. It was completed the following year, written for large orchestra and chorus which, as in Appalachia, plays an integral part in the work, although the singers here are wordless. To emphasise their role in providing colour to the texture, they were directed to be seated throughout, and to ‘sing on the vowel only which will produce the richest tone possible’.
In the words of Delius, the work ‘expresses the joy and exhilaration one feels in the mountains and also the loneliness and melancholy of the high solitudes and the grandeur of the wide far distances. The human voices represent man in nature; an episode which becomes fainter and then disappears altogether’. Delius considered this not only one of his best works, but one of the works in which he had expressed himself most completely.
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