A Shropshire Lad, rhapsody for string orchestra

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AMG AllMusic Guide to Classical Music :

A Shropshire Lad, rhapsody for string orchestra

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Review

The Rhapsody, an orchestral epilogue to the composer's song cycle of the same name, is in the form of an elegy. Butterworth was the first of several English composers to set poems from A.E. Housman's "A Shropshire Lad," and chose those that mourn the lives and deaths of "redcoats" (British soldiers). Though the poems were written well before 1914, the music is now inseparable from the bleak years of the World War I, when it was written. The main theme is a meditation on one of Butterworth's most haunting songs, "The Cherry Tree." Though scored for a large orchestra, it is mostly somber, quiet music, with a climax toward the end as the trumpets poignantly echo the song tune, after which the somber mood returns. The Rhapsody ends with funereal drumbeats that sound eerily prophetic: Butterworth was killed in the last year of the war, at age 31. ~ Roy Brewer, Rovi

Albums with Complete Performances of the Work

Title Date
20th Century Classics
20th Century Classics
Boult Conducts Butterworth, Howells, Hadley & Warlock 2007
Butterworth/Parry/Bridge 1987
Butterworth: Shropshire Lad, rhapsody
Celebrating 50 Years Devoted to British Music, Set One 2010
Colderidge Taylor: Symphonic Variations on an African Air; Butterworth: A Shropshire Lad; MacGunn: Land of the Mounta
English Classics
English Masterworks 1988
English Rhapsody 2003
Greensleeves 1988
Moeran: Symphony in G minor; Two Pieces for Small Orchestra 1988
Sibelius: Symphony No. 3 2007
Sir Adrian Boult conducts English Music 1994
The British Music Collection: George Butterworth 2001
The Flag Series-England 1996
The Hallé
The Lark Ascending
The Spirit of England 1989
Vaughan Williams: Fantasia On Greensleeves, Etc. 1997
Vaughan Williams: Symphony No. 4; Butterworth: A Shropshire Lad; Antheil: Symphony No. 4 "1942" 2000
Warlock: Capriol Suite; Butterworth: A Shropshire Lad 1989

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