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Britten: A Midsummer Night's Dream
 
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Britten: A Midsummer Night's Dream

Alfred Deller Audio CD
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Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this with Benjamin Britten: A Midsummer Night's Dream - Glyndebourne Festival Opera [1981] [DVD] [2004] £8.79

Britten: A Midsummer Night's Dream + Benjamin Britten: A Midsummer Night's Dream - Glyndebourne Festival Opera [1981] [DVD] [2004]
Price For Both: £26.78

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Product details

  • Composer: Benjamin Britten
  • Audio CD (22 Mar 1990)
  • SPARS Code: ADD
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Label: London
  • ASIN: B0000041WB
  • Other Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 17,446 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         


Disc 1:

Samples
Song TitleArtist Time Price
Listen  1. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 1 - "Over hill, over dale"Downside School, Purley, Choir Of 4:04£0.79
Listen  2. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 1 - "Oberon is passing fell and wrath"Downside School, Purley, Choir Of 3:03£0.79
Listen  3. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 1 - "Well, go thy way"Alfred Deller 3:24£0.79
Listen  4. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 1 - "How now my love?"Sir Peter Pears 4:32£0.79
Listen  5. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 1 - "Be it on lion, bear, or wolf, or bull"Alfred Deller 3:40£0.79
Listen  6. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 1 - "Welcome wanderer!"Alfred Deller 4:30£0.79
Listen  7. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 1 - "Is all our company her?"Norman Lumsden 7:36£1.09
Listen  8. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 1 - "Fair love, you faint with wand'ring in the wood"Sir Peter Pears 2:41£0.79
Listen  9. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 1 - "Through the forest have I gone"Stephen Terry 1:45£0.79
Listen10. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 1 - "Stay, though thou kill me, sweet Demetrius"Heather Harper 5:14£0.79
Listen11. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 1 - "Come, now a roundel and a fairy song"Elizabeth Harwood 1:58£0.79
Listen12. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 1 - "You spotted snakes with double tongue"Richard Dakin 2:14£0.79
Listen13. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 1 - "What thou seest when thou dost wake"Alfred Deller 1:46£0.79
Listen14. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 2 - Introduction: The woodThe London Symphony Orchestra 3:19£0.79
Listen15. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 2 - "Are we all met?"Owen Brannigan 7:36£1.09
Listen16. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 2 - "I see their knavery"Owen Brannigan 3:05£0.79
Listen17. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 2 - "Be kind and courteous to this gentleman"Elizabeth Harwood 1:16£0.79
Listen18. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 2 - "Hail, mortal, hail!"Richard Dakin 5:13£0.79
Listen19. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 2 - "I have a reas'nable good ear in music"Owen Brannigan 3:39£0.79
Listen20. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 2 - "How now, mad spirit?"Alfred Deller 3:06£0.79


Disc 2:

Samples
Song TitleArtist Time Price
Listen  1. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 2 - "Flower of this purple dye"Alfred Deller 6:32£0.79
Listen  2. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 2 - "Puppet? Why so?"Josephine Veasey 3:05£0.79
Listen  3. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 2 - "This is thy negligence"Alfred Deller 2:09£0.79
Listen  4. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 2 - "Up and down, up and down"Stephen Terry 6:02£0.79
Listen  5. A Midsummer Night's Dream / Act 2 - "On the ground, sleep sound"Downside School, Purley, Choir Of 3:04£0.79
Listen  6. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "My gentle Robin, see'st thou this sweet sight?"Alfred Deller 7:08£1.09
Listen  7. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "Helena! Hermi! Demetrius! Lysander!"Thomas Hemsley 4:46£0.79
Listen  8. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "When my cue comes, call me"Owen Brannigan 3:37£0.79
Listen  9. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "Have you sent to Bottom's house?"Norman Lumsden 3:09£0.79
Listen10. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "Now, fair Hippolyta"John Shirley-Quirk 7:24£1.09
Listen11. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "Iff we offend, it is with our good will"Owen Brannigan 1:20£0.79
Listen12. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "Gentles, perchange you wonder at this show"Norman Lumsden 1:16£0.79
Listen13. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "In this same interlude it doth befall"Robert Tear 1:10£0.79
Listen14. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "O grim-look'd night, O night with hue so black"Owen Brannigan 1:51£0.79
Listen15. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "O wall, fur often hast thou heard my moans"Kenneth McDonald 2:30£0.79
Listen16. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "You ladies, you whose gentle hearts do fear"David Kelly0:46£0.39
Listen17. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "This lanthorn doth the horned moon present"Keith Raggett 1:50£0.79
Listen18. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "Sweet moon, I thank thee for thy sunny beams"Owen Brannigan 1:52£0.79
Listen19. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "Asleep, my love?"Kenneth McDonald 2:32£0.79
Listen20. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "Come, your Bergomask"John Shirley-Quirk 2:46£0.79
Listen21. A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op.64 / Act 3 - "Now the hungry lion roars"Richard Dakin 5:03£0.79


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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars MAGICAL PERFORMANCE: MAGICAL OPERA, 12 Nov 2005
By 
Klingsor Tristan (Suffolk) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Britten: A Midsummer Night's Dream (Audio CD)
This was the first opera I ever saw live, during its initial London run a few months after the Aldeburgh premiere. I still carry vivid memories of that evening as a magical experience. And magic certainly lies at the heart of this entrancing (almost literally) piece.

From the sounds of the forest breathing in the opening string glissandos to the fairies' glittering benediction on Duke Theseus house at the end, Britten conjures a wonderful array of colours and pictures from his relatively modest orchestra. Each group of characters is given its own distinctive orchestral palette - strings with woodwinds predominate for the Lovers, the trombone fills in its fatter, comical tones when the Rustics appear, horns add a touch of regality for Theseus' court and the Fairies sparkle with the inspired combination of Purcellian harpsichord with harp and modern tuned percussion. Puck flits around with a sprightly trumpet always in tow (brilliantly played by William Lang on this recording).

But the piece is much deeper and more disturbing than all that surface magic suggests. Britten and Pears extracted one of the most successful of all Shakespearean librettos from the play. They managed to excise the whole of Shakespeare's First Act merely by the addition of their one and only original line ('Compelling thee to marry with Demetrius'). Thus the opera focuses even more than the play on the Wood and the misunderstandings, confusions, dreams, nightmares and, above all, the power of sleep that it brings to all the characters (including, of course, Oberon and Tytania despite their delusions of omnipotence). Sleep with its benign and malign effects was a preoccupation of Britten's throughout his career - from Les Illuminations and the Serenade through Let Us Sleep in War Requiem and Dormi nunc in the Cantata Misericordium to Aschenbach's Dionysian nightmare in Death in Venice. The deepest explorations, though, are contained in the contemporaneous Nocturne and here in the Dream.

The key to this is Act 2 of the opera and the four 'sleep' chords that open it and on which the whole structure is based. Between them they contain all 12 notes of the chromatic scale. But this is no serial piece. The implicit dissonances can certainly cloud the harmonic air at moments of crisis and conflict, but the key centres implied by each chord can also restore consonance again. And all four chords provide a healing benediction below Puck's 'Jack shall have Jill' prophesy at the end of the Act.

None of this takes away from the fact that this is, of course, a comedy - it merely serves, as in all great comedies, to deepen the human impact. Much of the opera is very funny - the lovers' confusions, the big quarrel scene and, naturally, much of the Rustics material. The Pyramus & Thisbe play has come in for its share of stick - too arch, too knowing, etc. - but I still find Britten's parodies of grand and bel canto operas funny, especially the way he takes the Michael out of Bellini and Donizetti.

This recording, under the composer's direction, has most things going for it, not least Britten's impeccable pacing of the score. The lovers are a mixed bunch: Veasey and Harper are excellent, Hemsley very good, but Pears is hopelessly miscast as Lysander. Flute was his part in the premiere and was probably the best part for him - he caught 'Oh sweet bully Bottom' perfectly. But he is frankly too old, too knowing and the wrong voice for the ardent young lover. Brannigan is by far the best Bottom on disc - as well as all the knockabout stuff, he captures the awe, the wonder and the sense of a life changed by his experiences to perfection in Bottom's Dream. The rest of the Rustics, ably led by Norman Lumsden's Peter Quince (J.R.Hartley, no less), are all worthy of their starring roles in the play as well as in their contributions to the rehearsals. The Fairies are a match for any of their rivals on disc. Deller may lack some of the darker, more menacing side of Oberon's character that James Bowman captures so well, but his singing of the ravishingly Purcellian 'I know a bank' is matchless. So, too the late Elizabeth Harwood in all Tytania's florid coloratura passages.

While Colin Davis and Richard Hickox produce performances of this many-layered opera that make for fascinating comparisons with this first recorded reading, these are still the yardstick discs of Britten's Dream.
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24 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Haunting and evocative...once heard never forgotten., 25 Feb 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Britten: A Midsummer Night's Dream (Audio CD)
As soon as you hear the glissandi double basses at the opening of this opera you will enter the world of Titania and Oberon.Britten captures this other worldliness by making Oberon a counter-tenor,a vocal quality both strange and powerful in this magical world. Childrens voices add to the atmosphere of delicacy; Puck circles the world and Titania -a high lyric soprano idles away with some of the most heart moving arias.
Britten's use of a small orcheatra creates all the varied colour needed for the fairy world and that of the mechanicals.
Midsummer Night's Dream is one of the best 'stories' there is and in the hands of Britten becomes even more 'fantastic'.I can't recommend it highly enough to someone who has never tried a Britten opera...you will be amazed!
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars MORE THAN STANDS UP TO LATER COMPETITION, 24 Oct 2005
By Klingsor Tristan - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Britten: A Midsummer Night's Dream (Audio CD)
This was the first opera I ever saw live, during its initial London run a few months after the Aldeburgh premiere. I still carry vivid memories of that evening as a magical experience. And magic certainly lies at the heart of this entrancing (almost literally) piece.

From the sounds of the forest breathing in the opening string glissandos to the fairies' glittering benediction on Duke Theseus house at the end, Britten conjures a wonderful array of colours and pictures from his relatively modest orchestra. Each group of characters is given its own distinctive orchestral palette - strings with woodwinds predominate for the Lovers, the trombone fills in its fatter, comical tones when the Rustics appear, horns add a touch of regality for Theseus' court and the Fairies sparkle with the inspired combination of Purcellian harpsichord with harp and modern tuned percussion. Puck flits around with a sprightly trumpet always in tow (brilliantly played by William Lang on this recording).

But the piece is much deeper and more disturbing than all that surface magic suggests. Britten and Pears extracted one of the most successful of all Shakespearean librettos from the play. They managed to excise the whole of Shakespeare's First Act merely by the addition of their one and only original line (`Compelling thee to marry with Demetrius'). Thus the opera focuses even more than the play on the Wood and the misunderstandings, confusions, dreams, nightmares and, above all, the power of sleep that it brings to all the characters (including, of course, Oberon and Tytania despite their delusions of omnipotence). Sleep with its benign and malign effects was a preoccupation of Britten's throughout his career - from Les Illuminations and the Serenade through Let Us Sleep in War Requiem and Dormi nunc in the Cantata Misericordium to Aschenbach's Dionysian nightmare in Death in Venice. The deepest explorations, though, are contained in the contemporaneous Nocturne and here in the Dream.

The key to this is Act 2 of the opera and the four `sleep' chords that open it and on which the whole structure is based. Between them they contain all 12 notes of the chromatic scale. But this is no serial piece. The implicit dissonances can certainly cloud the harmonic air at moments of crisis and conflict, but the key centres implied by each chord can also restore consonance again. And all four chords provide a healing benediction below Puck's `Jack shall have Jill' prophesy at the end of the Act.

None of this takes away from the fact that this is, of course, a comedy - it merely serves, as in all great comedies, to deepen the human impact. Much of the opera is very funny - the lovers' confusions, the big quarrel scene and, naturally, much of the Rustics material. The Pyramus & Thisbe play has come in for its share of stick - too arch, too knowing, etc. - but I still find Britten's parodies of grand and bel canto operas funny, especially the way he takes the Michael out of Donizetti.

This recording, under the composer's direction, has most things going for it, not least Britten's impeccable pacing of the score. The lovers are a mixed bunch: Veasey and Harper are excellent, Hemsley very good, but Pears is hopelessly miscast as Lysander. Flute was his part in the premiere and was probably the best part for him - he caught `Oh sweet bully Bottom' perfectly. But he is frankly too old, too knowing and the wrong voice for the ardent young lover. Brannigan is by far the best Bottom on disc - as well as all the knockabout stuff, he captures the awe, the wonder and the sense of a life changed by his experiences to perfection in Bottom's Dream. The rest of the Rustics, ably led by Norman Lumsden's Peter Quince, are all worthy of their starring roles in the play as well as in their contributions to the rehearsals. The Fairies are a match for any of their rivals on disc. Deller may lack some of the darker, more menacing side of Oberon's character that James Bowman captures so well, but his singing of the ravishingly Purcellian `I know a bank' is matchless. So, too the late Elizabeth Harwood in all the florid coloratura passages.

While Colin Davis and Richard Hickox produce performances of this many-layered opera that make for fascinating comparisons with this first recorded reading, these are still the yardstick discs of Britten's Dream.

14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars brilliant, 14 Oct 2001
By Mr. W. Gaunt - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Britten: A Midsummer Night's Dream (Audio CD)
This is the only recording of this stunning work worth considering. It features (as far as I know) the original cast, right down to the original Oberon (Alfred Deller) who was cut from some of the stage performances because of his perceived weakness in acting. Here Britten as conductor has his singers for his opera and the effect is immense. It somehow conjures up the Shakespearian comedic atmosphere in a way that none of the other recordings do, simply because of the conductor's complete knowledge of every nuance of the music. As good as James Bowman may have been, and his own successors, this version is unbeatable.

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Tour De Force, 28 Jan 2004
By R. Albin - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Britten: A Midsummer Night's Dream (Audio CD)
This is a really impressive work. Shakespeare's play is long, has a complex plot, and a great deal of complicated language. Adapting this work for an opera would daunt almost anyone. Judicious cuts shorten the work substantially without sacrificing the integrity of the plot or any of the really important episodes. Britten's remarkable ability to shape music for english texts is exercised to its full capacity, and the plot is cleverly reinforced by the music. Britten develops 3 plot strands, the Oberon/Titania conflict, the romantic misadventures of Lysander/Helena/etc., and the story of the rude mechanicals. Each group is provided with distinctive and appropriate music. As the opera progresses, the plots intertwine and the musical styles become intermixed. This is a masterly combination of well developed literary judgement, stagecraft, and musical expression.
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