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Arnold Bax - Éire Trilogy: In the Faery Hills (2/3) 

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Éire Trilogy
II. In the Faery Hills (1909)
Éire is a triptych of three early symphonic poems by English composer Arnold Bax (1883-1953). In 1902, when Bax discovered the world of Celtic mythology and culture through the poetry of W. B. Yeats, he travelled to Ireland, studied its history and learned to read Irish Gaelic. Originally a Wagnerite, Bax began to incorporate elements of Irish music into his harmonic idiom; he also was influenced by (and an influence on) the French Impressionist composers, such as Debussy and Roussel, as well as his compatriot Frederick Delius.
In November 1907, Bax wrote a five-act play based on the legend of Deirdre from Irish mythology. He had been planning to adapt this play as the libretto of a future opera, but he soon gave up this project. Instead of discarding his musical sketches for the opera, he moulded them into a trilogy of "symphonic pictures," with the planned prelude becoming "Into the Twilight," after the poem of the same name by Yeats. The two companion pieces are the tone poems "In the Faery Hills" (1909) and "Rosc-catha" (1910), which also incorporate music from the abandoned opera. According to Bax, "[Into the Twilight] seeks to give a musical impression of the brooding quiet of the Western Mountains at the end of twilight, and to express something of the sense of timelessness and hypnotic dream which veils Ireland at such an hour." Other thematic material from this work is derived from the unifinished tone poem "Cathaleen-ni-Hoolihan."
"In the Faery Hills" was partially inspired by the following verses from Yeats' poem "The Wanderings of Oisin" (or Usheen):
And Niamh blew there merry notes
Out of a little silver trump
And then an answering whispering flew
Over the bare and woody land
But when I sang of human joy
A sorrow wrapped each merry face.
And caught the silver harp away,
And, weeping over the white strings, hurled
It down in a leaf-hid, hollow place.
The warlike "Rosc-catha" (pronounced "rusk-kah-ha" and meaning "Battle-hymn"), which depicts a fierce battle from Irish myth, concludes the trilogy with bravado and pathos. It was dedicated "To the 'mountainy men' of Glencolumcille."
Conductor: Vernon Handley
BBC Philharmonic Orchestra

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24 ноя 2010

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Комментарии : 8   
@wolfofthesevern
@wolfofthesevern 13 лет назад
Love this piece - takes me back to my student days at Reading, wandering the ridgeway and dreaming of all sorts of things to a soundtrack of Bax and Scriabin. THanks!!
@shishirth
@shishirth 12 лет назад
Intriguing piece
@TheTherese3
@TheTherese3 11 лет назад
We are all Romantics.Bax was a Romantic.John William's must have had his scores.We are still living off Bax sounds.
@fulviopolce7652
@fulviopolce7652 12 лет назад
bax mi è sempre piaciuto.
@johndow5599
@johndow5599 11 лет назад
What is this painting?
@katjao.h.321
@katjao.h.321 10 месяцев назад
06:16 - 06:35,
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