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Frederick Delius

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Frederick Theodore Albert Delius

(born Jan. 29, 1862, Bradford, Yorkshire, Eng. — died June 10, 1934, Grez-sur-Loing, France) British-born French composer. Born to German parents in England, he studied music in Leipzig and elsewhere, and in 1887 Edvard Grieg convinced his parents to let him pursue a musical career. He moved to France, eventually settling in a village near Paris. After World War I he gradually succumbed to paralysis and blindness, the consequence of syphilis. His works, influenced by Claude Debussy, include the operas A Village Romeo and Juliet (1901) and Fennimore and Gerda (1910); the tone poems Brigg Fair (1907) and On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring (1912); and the choral works Appalachia (1903) and A Mass of Life (1908).

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Music Encyclopedia: Frederick (Theodore Albert) Delius
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(b Bradford, 29 Jan 1862; d Grez-sur-Loing, 10 June 1934). English composer. His father lent him money to set up as a citrus grower in Florida (1884-6), where he had lessons with Thomas Ward; he then studied at the Leipzig Conservatory (1886-8) and met Grieg. He settled in Paris as a man of bohemian habits, a friend of Gauguin, Strindberg, Munch and others, until in 1897 he moved to Grez with Jelka Rosen, later his wife. There he remained.

He had written operas, orchestral pieces and much else before the move to Grez, but nearly all his regularly performed output dates from afterwards while looking back to the musical and other experiences of earlier years: the seamless flow of Wagner, the airier chromaticism of Grieg, the rich colouring of Strauss and Debussy, the existential independence of Nietzsche. His operas A Village Romeo and Juliet (1901) and Fennimore and Gerda (1910) are love stories cast in connected scenes and examining spiritual states within a natural world. Nature is important too in such orchestral pieces as In a Summer Garden (1908), A Song of the High Hills (with wordless chorus, 1911) or A Song of Summer (1930), though there are other works in which the characteristic rhapsodizing is made to serve symphonic forms, notably the Violin Concerto (1916) and three sonatas for violin and piano (1914, 1923, 1930). The choral works include two unaccompanied, wordless songs ‘to be sung of a summer night on the water’ (1917), the large-scale A Mass of Life with words from Nietzsche (1905) and a secular Requiem (1916). In the early 1920s he grew blind and paralysed as a result of syphilitic infection, and his last works were taken down by Eric Fenby.

works:
Dramatic works
  • Irmelin (1892, perf.1953)
  • The Magic Fountain (1895)
  • Koanga (1904)
  • A Village Romeo and Juliet (1901, perf., 1907)
  • Margot la Rouge (1902)
  • Fennimore and Gerda (1919)
  • Hassan, incidental music (1923)
Orchestral music
  • Pf Conc. (1897)
  • Paris: the Song of a Great City (1899)
  • Brigg Fair (1907)
  • In a Summer Garden (1908)
  • Summer Night on the River (1911)
  • On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring (1912)
  • North Country Sketches (1914)
  • Vn and vc Conc. (1916)
  • Vn Conc. (1916)
  • Vc Conc. (1921)
Choral music
  • Appalachia (1903)
  • Sea Drift (1904)
  • A Mass of life (1905)
  • A Song of the High Hills (1911)
  • 2 Songs to be sung of a Summer Night on the Water (1917)
Chamber music
  • 3 vn sonatas (1914, 1923, 1930)
  • Str Qt(1916)
  • Sonata, vc, pf(1916)
Vocal music
  • c 75 songs etc


British History: Frederick Delius
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Delius, Frederick (1862-1934). Composer. Born in Bradford (Yorks.) of German descent, Delius spent most of his life abroad yet his music often evokes a sense of the English landscape. His most popular pieces are short and idyllic, such as On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring or Brigg Fair. In his final years he was blind and paralysed but was able to continue composing through the assistance of Eric Fenby, his musical amanuensis.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Frederick Delius
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Delius, Frederick (dēl'yəs), 1862-1934, English composer, of German parentage. Influenced by Grieg, Delius combined romanticism and impressionism in his music, which is characterized by rather free structure and rich chromatic harmony. From 1886 to 1888 he studied in Leipzig, where his suite Florida (1887) was first performed. His works were appreciated earlier in Germany than in his native land, but recognition in England did come in his later years. Among his finest works are the orchestral pieces Brigg Fair (1907), On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring (1912), and North Country Sketches (1914). The best of his six operas is A Village Romeo and Juliet (1907). Outstanding also are his choral works Sea Drift (1906); A Mass of Life (1909), with text from Nietzsche's Thus Spake Zarathustra; and Song of the High Hills (1920). He also composed chamber music, concertos, and songs. In the 1920s Delius became blind and paralyzed but continued to compose and revise with the assistance of an amanuensis, Eric Fenby. His last public appearance was in London in 1929 at a six-day festival of his works organized by Sir Thomas Beecham.

Bibliography

See biographies by C. Delius (1935), Sir Thomas Beecham (1959, rev. ed. 1975), G. Jahoda (1969), and A. Jefferson (1972).

Dictionary: De·lius   ('lē-əs, dēl'yəs) pronunciation, Frederick
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1862-1934.

British composer whose work, influenced by Edvard Grieg, combines romanticism and impressionism.


Artist: Frederick Delius
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Frederick Delius
  • Period: Modern (1910-1949)
  • Country: England
  • Born: January 29, 1862 in Bradford, Yorkshire, England
  • Died: June 10, 1934 in Grez-sur-Loing, France
  • Genres: Chamber Music, Choral Music, Concerto, Keyboard Music, Opera, Orchestral Music, Vocal Music

Biography

Frederick Delius was an English composer who forged a unique version of the Impressionist musical language of the early twentieth century. He was born in Bradford, England, in 1862, and died in Grez-sur-Loing, France, in 1934. He did not come from a musical family; rather, his father owned a wool company and hoped that his son would follow a career in business. Delius, however, wanted to study music, and though his father did not approve of music as a profession, he did not discourage music-making as a pastime; thus, Delius was allowed to study the violin and the piano. To his father's dismay, he also spent much of his youth sneaking away from school to attend concerts and opera performances. When he completed school, he went to work for his father in the family business. In 1884, he left England for Florida, where he worked on a plantation as an orange grower. While in Florida, he began studying music with Thomas Ward, a musician and teacher from Jacksonville. Delius proved to be a failure as an orange grower, and began supporting himself as a musician. In 1886, his father arranged for him to spend a year and a half studying music in Germany at the Leipzig Conservatory. Though Delius would later insist that he learned very little of importance during his stay in Leipzig, it was there that he met Grieg, with whom he forged a lifelong friendship. Grieg convinced Delius' father to allow the young man to become a composer, and Delius, with the support of his formerly reluctant father, soon moved to Paris and began living the life of an artist.

Once in Paris, Delius began composing in earnest, and towards the end of the nineteenth century had already completed two operas, Irmelin and The Magic Fountain. In the first decade of the twentieth century, Delius married the painter Jelka Rosen and produced a number of important works, including the opera A Village Romeo and Juliet, the large-scale choral works Appalachia and A Mass of Life (based on the writings of Nietzsche), a piano concerto, and a number of songs and chamber pieces. His music was well-received throughout Europe, and Delius was quite successful up until World War I, when he was forced to leave France for England. Despite his renown in continental Europe, Delius was virtually unknown in his native England, and his stay there was marred by financial difficulties. After the war, Delius returned to France, where the syphilis he had contracted in Florida gradually caused him to become paralyzed and blind. Ironically, as Delius became increasingly infirm, his fame began to spread. This was due in large part to the efforts of English composer Sir Thomas Beecham, who championed Delius' music and organized a Delius Festival in 1929. Though terribly ill, Delius nonetheless still wanted to compose, and in 1928 enlisted the services of English musician Eric Fenby, to whom he dictated music (Fenby would later write a book about Delius). Towards the end of his life, Delius was made Companion of Honor by King George V of England, and was awarded an honorary degree in music by Oxford University. Before his death, Delius was able to hear his music over the radio and on record, but these accomplishments paled before the terrible deterioration of his health, and he died in seclusion. ~ Alexander Carpenter, All Music Guide
Actor: Frederick Delius
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Biography

The music of Delius having appeared in only three major features to date, one might expect filmmakers to avail themselves more fully of his richly beautiful yet ephemeral timbres and endlessly unfolding melodies, but perhaps his unique sound and moods fit only very subtle and special scenarios.

Delius' musical style developed fully in his late thirties. From Wagner's music he learned his sense of flow enhanced by an elusive chromaticism, and from Grieg he inherited the skill of writing touching modal melodies and of presenting an airy orchestral texture. Life in his music and its subjects is expressed as transient yet ever renewing. In 1989, Petr Weigl created an exquisite film version of the Delius masterpiece, his opera A Village Romeo and Juliet (1900-1901), based on Gottfried Keller's "poetic realist" novella Romeo und Julia auf dem Dorfe. The poetic realism movement embraced folk and peasant culture as a counterbalance to the encroachment of industrialism. Delius decided to focus on the love affair between Sali (Manz's son) and Vreli (Marti's daughter) rather than setting the scenes in the original story that dealt with the violent conflict between Manz and Marti, a long-standing feud between the families.

There are many elegant matches of visuals and music in this film. Each of the establishing landscapes is differentiated by a unique musical setting, sometimes with the rich sonority of six French horns, and at other times with woodwind figures describing flowing streams, or with echoing lontano (distant) horns with soft tympani rolls and slowly evolving timbres underscoring the sun setting between snowy mountains. And, for consummate beauty, few musical or cinematic moments can compare with the orchestral interlude Walk to the Paradise Garden, or the lyric passion of the couple's final love-duet ("See the Moonbeams Kiss the Woods"). The wonderful waltz rhythms of the scene at the Berghald Fair are complemented by the constant interplay of characters moving at various tempos, dancing, walking, chasing, standing at booths, and so on. The character of the Dark Fiddler is perfectly drawn (played by Thomas Hampson) as a wandering outcast and representative of the voice of nature who offers to the couple the possibility of entering his bohemian world free from religious, parental, and moral strictures. The couple eventually decide to stay to themselves: Sali asks Vreli if they should follow the bohemians to the mountains, and on that last word the screen reveals snow-capped peaks in light accompanied by a horn theme.

Ken Russell's droll and compassionate Song of Summer (1968) traces the loves and foibles of a composer (Delius) in seaside, mountainside, and hotel room scenes accompanied by some of Delius' finest music: Song of the High Hills, Brigg Fair, Requiem, Walk to the Paradise Garden, and Song of Summer. The beautifully photographed The Yearling (1946), adapted from the Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings novel, employs themes from several of Delius' works including the Florida Suite (1887) (themes). The film tells the story of a rebel soldier, his wife, and their 11-year-old son Jody who move near the Florida Everglades after the Civil War to farm. The fearful, hardened mother is troubled by the death of her other children, while the father is warm-hearted. The boy has to face harsher realities as his pet fawn grows to maturity. In 1884, Delius himself settled at Solano Grove near Jacksonville, FL, on the St. Johns River supposedly to grow oranges but actually to get the freedom to compose. ~ "Blue" Gene Tyranny, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Frederick Delius
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Frederick Delius with his wife Jelka Rosen in 1929

Frederick Albert Theodore Delius CH (29 January 1862 – 10 June 1934) was an English composer.

Contents

Life

Frederick Delius was born in Bradford in the West Riding of Yorkshire in the north of England. His parents were German: Julius and Elise Pauline Delius had moved from Bielefeld, Germany to Britain to set themselves up in the wool business. Frederick ('Fritz' to his family, 'Fred' to his friends) Delius was the fourth of their fourteen children.

He was educated at Bradford Grammar School (where the singer John Coates was his contemporary). Delius felt little attraction to the country of his birth and spent most of his life abroad, in the United States and on the continent of Europe, chiefly in France. Nonetheless his music has been described by Felix Aprahamian as 'extremely redolent of the soil of this country [Britain] and characteristic of the finer elements of the national spirit'.[1]

Although Frederick showed early musical promise, his father was very much set against a musical career and wanted him to work in the family business.

In America

Julius Delius eventually sent Frederick (apparently at Frederick's request) to be the manager of a grapefruit plantation at Solano Grove on the St Johns River in Florida, USA. There, west of St Augustine and south of Jacksonville, Delius continued to be engrossed in music and in Jacksonville met Thomas Ward, who became his teacher in counterpoint and composition.

While in Florida, Delius had his first composition published, and later put his memories into the Florida Suite, written at Leipzig in 1887. The house he lived in from 1884 to 1885 in Solano Grove was given to Jacksonville University and moved on campus in 1961. The University holds the Delius Festival each year in honour of the composer. After he left Florida, Delius taught music in Danville, Virginia and eventually moved to New York.

Europe

After his stay in New York, his father finally agreed to allow him a musical education, and consented to send him to Leipzig, Germany, to study at the conservatory. He was befriended there by Edvard Grieg, who encouraged him and became a lifelong friend.

In 1897 Delius met the German painter Jelka Rosen. They soon set up home in the French village of Grez-sur-Loing, near Fontainebleau, and married in 1903. Apart from a short period when the area was threatened by the advancing German army during the First World War, he lived in Grez for the rest of his life.

In 1907 he met Thomas Beecham, who was to be the greatest champion of his music during his lifetime in the English-speaking world. Until then Delius's audience was German, principally due to the conductors Fritz Cassirer and Hans Haym.

Delius's latter years were spent chiefly at the home he and Jelka set up in Grez. These years were marred by increasing ill-health. As a young man he had caught syphilis, the long term effects of which were to rob him of his sight and to cause him to become increasingly paralysed, eventually needing use of a wheelchair. He therefore employed Eric Fenby, who originally wrote Delius a fan letter, as his amanuensis and the great works of Delius's final years were dictated to Fenby, who later wrote a book about the experience of working with Delius.[2] Fenby also co-wrote the screen adaptation from the book for a 1968 film, Song of Summer, directed by Ken Russell, starring Max Adrian as the blind composer and Christopher Gable as Fenby.

Delius was profoundly engaged in the contemplation of nature and disliked religion, though Koanga displays an interest in voodooism. He admired the writings of Friedrich Nietzsche, and his choice of Nietzsche texts for A Mass of Life, the determinism evident in Irmelin and the Village Romeo and Juliet, and the living metempsychosis of the boy and the seagull in Sea Drift have prompted some to see in his work a form of pantheism.

Death and burial

Delius died at Grez in 1934 and was buried in a nearby cemetery on the Marlotte road that leads out of Grez. The interment ceremony was unusual: there was no priest present, and there were no prayers or music. In 1935, in completion of his own declared wish to be buried in 'a quiet country chuchyard in a south of England village', his remains were exhumed and taken from France to the United Kingdom. Jelka contracted pneumonia during the Channel crossing, and could not attend the funeral. On 24 May an Anglican interment took place at the Church of Saint Peter in Limpsfield, Surrey. Vast crowds converged, and a section of the London Philharmonic Orchestra, together with the cellist Beatrice Harrison (of Oxted, nearby), who had given early performances of his works, performed after the funeral ceremony, and Sir Thomas Beecham gave the address. After Jelka died, four days later, she was interred in the same grave as her husband. Beecham's grave is situated approximately ten metres from theirs.

Music

Delius's musical style is unusual in Western music. Characterized by a curious mixture of pentatonic figures and chromaticism, although still largely tonal, it reflects a move from the textbook post-romanticism of the years following the death of Richard Wagner (1883) to a style that was unique to Delius, blending Impressionism with the slightly older post-romanticism and northern European and African-American folk idioms. His use of luscious harmonies — mainly slow moving, and constantly evolving melody, with the frequent use of leitmotifs — is what prompted Sir Thomas Beecham to describe him as "the last great apostle of romantic beauty in music." His harmony and melody were influenced greatly by African-American music of the time, using blues harmony and melodic characteristics that would become distinctly jazz and blues 20 years later.

Not everyone likes his work: Bernard Levin famously called it "the musical equivalent of blancmange" and it is an acquired taste - and not everyone acquires it.

His best-known works include the brief orchestral piece On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring; Brigg Fair ('An English Rhapsody'); In A Summer Garden; North Country Sketches; A Mass of Life to Friedrich Nietzsche's Also sprach Zarathustra; Florida Suite; Sea Drift, a setting of text by Walt Whitman, for baritone, chorus and orchestra; A Late Lark, setting of text by William Ernest Henley; Songs of Farewell, another setting of Whitman texts, for chorus and orchestra; Cynara and Songs of Sunset, both settings of texts by Ernest Dowson; Koanga, which as an opera with a black principal character antedates George Gershwin's Porgy and Bess by four decades and is roughly contemporaneous with Scott Joplin's Treemonisha; an atheist Requiem; four concertos: a violin concerto, a cello concerto, a double concerto for violin and cello, and a piano concerto (also somewhat Gershwinesque); the colourful, picturesque tone poem Paris: Song of a Great City; and the beautifully exuberant symphonic composition Life's Dance. Orchestral excerpts from his operas, for example La Calinda from Koanga — which originated in the Florida Suite — and The Walk to the Paradise Garden from A Village Romeo and Juliet, are also played and recorded reasonably often. There are a number of chamber works (three mature violin sonatas, a cello sonata and a string quartet).

Recording projects

The difficulties that Delius experienced in obtaining adequate public performance of his works caused him (and those who admired his music) to recognise the necessity of making available good quality gramophone records, by which it should become more widely known. As in live performance, Thomas Beecham was the pioneer of this movement, although Geoffrey Toye (with the London Symphony Orchestra) conducted a notable group of orchestral recordings for HMV around 1930 including Brigg Fair, In a Summer Garden (A Song before Sunrise conducted by John Barbirolli on the fourth side), On Hearing the First Cuckoo, and Summer Night on the River, which were admired by the composer, among others.[3] There are no very early recordings of the concerti, but by 1936[4] the Violin Sonata No. 1 was recorded by May Harrison with Arnold Bax (HMV), and No. 2 by Albert Sammons with Evlyn Howard-Jones (Columbia); the second is also in the viola arrangement by Lionel Tertis with George Reeves, in a set that also contains the "Entr'acte" and "Serenade" from the incidental music to James Elroy Flecker's Hassan.[5] Beatrice Harrison had recorded the Elegie and Caprice with a small orchestra under Fenby's direction. Howard-Jones also recorded several short keyboard works.

The scarce 1929 Decca recording of Sea Drift.

The first Sea Drift to be issued (though soon deleted) was Decca's in 1929 with Roy Henderson, conducted by Anthony Bernard (though the conductor is not named on the label).[6] Decca was founded in 1929, and this was one of its earliest releases, a succès d'estime for the company's founder, Sir Edward Lewis. Thomas Beecham had made the first recording of the work a year earlier, with baritone Dennis Noble, the London Symphony Orchestra and the Manchester Beecham Opera Chorus (Columbia), but poor acoustics caused it to remain unpublished. Beecham began his Delius recordings with the old Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, for Columbia, with the Walk to the Paradise Garden and the First Cuckoo, in December 1927, and Summer Night on the River (July 1928), but had two failed attempts at Brigg Fair in July and November 1928 before fully achieving his intentions in a December session. In 1929 he accompanied at the piano a series of Delius song recordings with Dora Labbette, only some of which were issued.

Delius Society recordings

In April 1934 Beecham recorded Paris: The Song of a Great City (with the London Philharmonic Orchestra), and as Fenby sat with the dying Delius they waited in vain for the test pressings to be released by the French Customs. Delius told Fenby he wanted Beecham to record all his best music.[7] Soon after Delius's death, Beecham persuaded Jelka (who knew that she was in failing health) that a Delius Trust should be created to make possible a model edition of his works and to provide for them to be recorded. For the latter purpose a Delius Society was formed, initially as a private organization, and at the request of Beecham and the Society Committee it was taken over in 1934 by Columbia Records,[8] for the issue of records outside the normal monthly listings, which could be obtained by members of the public who paid a subscription to the Society. Three volumes were issued before the war, all conducted by Beecham.[9]
Volume 1 (recorded 1934, issued 1934/5): Paris; Koanga, closing scene; Eventyr; Hassan, Interlude and Serenade; songs 'To the Queen of my Heart' and 'Love's Philosophy' (with Heddle Nash).
Volume 2 (recorded 1936): Sea Drift (with John Brownlee); Over the Hills and Far Away; In a Summer Garden; Intermezzo from Fennimore and Gerda.
Volume 3 (recorded 1938): Appalachia; Hassan, La Calinda, and closing scene (with Jan van der Gucht); the prelude from Irmelin. Several other titles recorded in 1938 remained unpublished.

After the war Beecham resumed the project, but now under the HMV label.[10] Four titles, including the Piano Concerto with Betty Humby Beecham, made in October 1945 remained unpublished, but a year later the concerto was successfully re-recorded, a fine version of the Violin Concerto with Jean Pougnet was made, and also First Cuckoo, Song of the High Hills, Brigg Fair, Marche Caprice and the Irmelin prelude. The Songs of Sunset with Nancy Evans and Redvers Llewellyn were recorded but not issued. However, May and July 1948 saw a complete A Village Romeo and Juliet (12 discs). After a failed Sea Drift with Gordon Clinton in January 1951, there was a successful one with Bruce Boyce in April 1954. In January and April 1953, the celebrated recording of A Mass of Life (with Rosina Raisbeck, Monica Sinclair, Charles Craig and Bruce Boyce) was made.[11] A substantial recording of incidental music for Flecker's Hassan was made by Beecham for CBS Columbia in October 1955, and other Delius Trust recordings continued to appear on that label. He cut many other records of shorter works between 1946 and 2 April 1957; meanwhile Sir Anthony Collins was recording some of these for Decca.[12] A powerful account of the violin concerto by Robert Gerle (conducted by Robert Zeller) was recorded by Westminster and issued by World Record Club (CM 59) about 1960; the work was again chosen, together with the Double Concerto, conducted by Meredith Davies and performed by Yehudi Menuhin with Paul Tortelier, for an EMI Quadrophonic release in 1977 (ASD 3343), produced in consultation with Eric Fenby. At about the same time the World Record Club (having become a branch of EMI) reissued the early Beecham Delius recordings in two box set volumes on its 'Retrospect' label, also under Fenby's supervision.

List of works

Operas

Incidental music

  • Zanoni (1888)
  • Folkeraadet (1897)
  • Hassan (1920-23)

Concertos

  • Suite for Violin and Orchestra (1888)
  • Légende for Violin and Orchestra (1895)
  • Piano Concerto in C minor (1897)
  • Double Concerto for Violin, Cello and Orchestra (1915-16)
  • Violin Concerto (1916)
  • Cello Concerto (1921)
  • Caprice and Elegy for Cello and Orchestra (1930)

Orchestral works

  • Florida Suite (1887)
  • Three Pieces (Schlittenfahrt and March caprice, 1887–88)
  • Hiawatha — tone poem (1888)
  • Idylle de Printemps (1889)
  • Little Suite (1889-90)
  • Three Small Tonepoems (Summer Evening, Winter Night, Spring Morning, 1890)
  • Paa Vidderne (Sur les cimes) — Symphonic Poem after Ibsen (1890–92; version with speaker 1888))
  • Over the Hills and Far Away — Fantasy Overture (1895–97)
  • Appalachia for Orchestra and Chorus (1896)
  • La Ronde Se Déroule — Symphonic Poem (1899)
  • Paris: The Song of a Great City (1899)
  • Brigg Fair: An English Rhapsody (1907)
  • In a Summer Garden — Rhapsody (1908)
  • Dance Rhapsody no. 1 (1908)
  • Life's Dance (1908?)
  • Two Pieces for Small Orchestra (On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring, 1912; Summer Night on the River, 1911)
  • North Country Sketches (1913–14)
  • Air and Dance for Strings (1915)
  • Dance Rhapsody no. 2 (1916)
  • Eventyr (Once Upon a Time) (1917)
  • A Song Before Sunrise for Small Orchestra (1918)
  • A Song of Summer (1929–30)
  • Irmelin Prelude (1931)
  • Fantastic Dance (1931)

Vocal works

  • Six German Partsongs for Choir (1887)
  • Sakuntala for Tenor and Orchestra (1889)
  • Maud for Tenor and Orchestra (1891)
  • Mitternachtslied for Baritone, Male Choir und Orchestra (1898)
  • Appalachia for Choir und Orchestra (1898-1903)
  • Sea Drift for Baritone, Choir and Orchestra (1903–04)
  • A Mass of Life for Soloists, Choir and Orchestra (1904–05)
  • Songs of Sunset for Mezzo-soprano, Baritone, Choir and Orchestra (1906–07)
  • Cynara for Baritone und Orchestra (1907; completed 1929)
  • On Craig Dhu for Choir and Piano (1907)
  • Midsummer Song for Choir and Piano (1908)
  • Wanderer's Song for Male Choir and Piano (1908)
  • An Arabesk for Baritone, Choir and Orchestra (1911)
  • A Song of the High Hills for Choir and Orchestra (1911)
  • Two Songs for a Children's Album (1913)
  • Requiem for Soprano, Baritone, Choir and Orchestra (1914–16)
  • Two Songs to be sung of a Summer Night on the Water for Choir (1917)
  • The splendour falls on castle walls for Choir (1923)
  • A Late Lark for Voice and Orchestra (1925)
  • Songs of Farewell for Choir and Orchestra (1930)
  • Idyll: Once I passed through a populous city for Soprano, Baritone and Orchestra (1930–32)

Chamber music

  • String Quartet (1888)
  • Romance for Violin and Piano (1889)
  • Violin Sonata B-major (1892)
  • String Quartet (1893)
  • Romance for Cello and Piano (1896)
  • Violin Sonata No. 1 (1905-14)
  • String Quartet (1916)
  • Cello Sonata (1916)
  • Violin Sonata No. 2 (1923)
  • Violin Sonata No. 3 (1930)

Piano and harpsichord music

  • Pensées Mélodieuses (no. 2, 1885)
  • Two Pieces for Piano (1889–90)
  • Dance for Cembalo (1919)
  • Five Pieces for Piano (1922–23)
  • Three Preludes for Piano (1923)
  • Zum Carnival
  • Badinage
  • Presto leggiero

Songs

  • Five Songs from the Norwegian (1888)
  • Seven Songs from the Norwegian (1889–90; 2 orchestral songs)
  • Three English Songs (1891)
  • Two Songs after Verlaine (1895; with orchestra)
  • Seven Danish Songs (1897; with orchestra)
  • Four Songs after Nietzsche (1898)
  • Im Glück wir lachend gingen (1898)
  • The Violet (1900; with orchestra)
  • Autumn (1900)
  • Black Roses (1901)
  • Summer Landscape (1902; with orchestra)
  • The nightingale has a lyre of gold (1910)
  • La lune blanche (1911; with orchestra)
  • Chanson d'automne (1911)
  • I-Brasil (1913)
  • Four Old English Lyrics (1915–16)
  • Avant que tu ne t'en ailles (1919)
  • 18 unpublished songs

Literature

(in chronological order)

  • Philip Heseltine (Peter Warlock), Frederick Delius (Bodley Head, London 1923).
  • Eric Fenby, Delius as I knew him (orig. G. Bell & Sons Ltd, London 1936). (repr. Cambridge University Press). ISBN 0-521-28768-5
  • Arthur Hutchings, Delius (Macmillan, London 1949)
  • Thomas Beecham, Frederick Delius (orig. Hutchinson 1959; revised edn. Severn House Publishers 1975). ISBN 0-7278-0099-X
  • Gloria Jahoda, "The Music Maker of Solano Grove", Ch.13 in Florida Classics Library, The Other Florida (Charles Scribner's Sons, Port Salerno 1967). Library of Congress cat. no. 67-21339
  • Gloria Jahoda, The Road to Samarkand: Frederick Delius and His Music, (Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1969), Library of Congress cat. no. 69-17063.
  • Eric Fenby, The Great Composers: Delius (T.Y. Crowell Co., 1972).
  • Christopher Redwood, A Delius Companion: A 70th birthday tribute to Eric Fenby (John Calder 1976, 1980). ISBN 0-7145-3826-4
  • Lionel Carley (ed.), Delius: A Life in Letters (2 vols, Scolar Press, 1983, 1988). ISBN 1-85928-178-8
  • Anthony Payne, 'Frederick Delius', in The New Grove Twentieth-Century English Masters (New York: W. W. Norton, 1986) pp. 69–96. (Reprint of article from The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie (London and Washington, D.C.: Macmillan, 1980).)

As an inspiration for other artists

  • The song "Delius" by Kate Bush (from her 1980 album Never For Ever). A specially-recorded video for the song was played for a bemused Fenby on the Russell Harty Show on 25 November 1980.
  • The characters Robert Frobisher and Vyvyan Ayrs in the 2004 novel Cloud Atlas appear to have been loosely inspired by Fenby and Delius
  • Ken Russell's 1968 television film Song of Summer, produced for the BBC's Omnibus series, dramatizes Fenby's working relationship with Delius.

References

  1. ^ Introduction to revised edition of Beecham (1959), 1975, p. 6.
  2. ^ Fenby, 1936, Delius as I Knew Him.
  3. ^ Fenby 1936, 221.
  4. ^ Discographical details from R.D. Darrell, The Gramophone Shop Encyclopedia of Recorded Music, New York 1936.
  5. ^ Tertis had performed his arrangement (with Fenby) of the 3rd Violin Sonata for Delius at Grez (see Fenby 1936, 122).
  6. ^ Listed as deleted in Darrell (1936). See letter of Norman Gentieu, relating conversations with Felix Aprahamian, [1] in The Delian (Philadelphia), 2005; also Lionel Carley's Jelka Rosen Delius: Artist, Admirer and Friend of Rodin. The Correspondence 1.1900–1914 and 2.Concluded (Nottingham French Studies, Vol IX, 1970, pp. 16–30, 81–102), in which Bernard's conducting is specified: the S. Upton and M. Walker 1969 Delius discography states that the conductor was Stanley Chapple.
  7. ^ Fenby 1936, 220-222.
  8. ^ Douglas Pudney, The Beecham-Delius Recordings in World Record Club LP Delius Society recordings reissue (Cat. SHB 32, 1976), The Music of Delius Vol I, leaflet accompanying records.
  9. ^ Beecham 1959, revised edn 1975, 212 and discography ff. p 228.
  10. ^ See Discography in Beecham 1959, revised edition 1975, ff p. 228.
  11. ^ n.b. The soprano role in this recording includes some takes recorded by Sylvia Fisher, who was replaced by Rosina Raisbeck for the remainder.
  12. ^ See EMG, The Art of Record Buying — 1960, pp. 51-52.

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