Thomas Arne
1710–1778. British composer. in the English Baroque tradition.
Thomas Arne is best known for Rule, Britannia! and the opera Artaxerxes, the first full-length opera in English. A significant figure in 18th-century English music but with limited modern discography.
Signature works: Artaxerxes, Rule, Britannia!, Comus, The Judgment of Paris, Thomas and Sally.
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- Ireland: Full fathom five
- Vaughan Williams: Dirge for Fidele
- Moeran: The Lover and his Lass
- Castelnuovo-Tedesco: Arise, "Sea Murmurs"
- Smith, J C: You spotted snakes
- Tippett: Songs for Ariel
- Arne: Under the Greenwood Tree
- Gurney: Under the greenwood tree
- Parry: Sonnet LXXXVII
- Ireland: When daffodils begin to peer
- Haydn: She Never Told Her Love, Hob. XXVIa:34
- Schubert: An Silvia, D 106
- Schubert: Ständchen 'Horch! Horch! die Lerch!', D889
- Schubert: Trinklied D888
- Schumann: Schlusslied des Narren, Op.127 No. 5
- Wolf, H: Lied des transferierten Zettel
- Cornelius: Komm herbei, Tod, Op.16 No. 3
- Frances-Hoad: Rosalind
- Poulenc: Fancy
- Britten: Fancie
- Honegger: Deux Chants d'Ariel
- Bridge: Blow, blow, thou winter wind
- Dring: Take, O Take Those Lips Away
- Dankworth: Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?
- Horder: Under the greenwood tree
- Coleridge-Taylor: The Willow Song
- Beach, A: Fairy Lullaby
- Williams, Roderick: Sigh no More, Ladies
- Sullivan, A: Orpheus with his Lute
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A Thousand Charms
$19.99CDSignum Classics
Jan 16, 2026SIGCD960
Rise Up
“At just 9 years of age Luca had already toured the world with Libera Boys Choir. A featured soloist on Aled Jones' track Vespera and Kurt Bestors' Ave Maria he has also been invited to perform at many charity events. In 2022 Luca was Runner Up in BBC Young Chorister of The Year. He has a large following on social media and high praise from industry professionals including Katherine Jenkins, who claimed he "has a God-given voice". This debut album directed by Robert Lewis with The Hennessey Brown Music Collective includes many fresh arrangements of Luca’s favourite music.”
Thomas A. Arne: Overtures & Cantatas / Terey-Smith, True, Megyesi, Capella Savaria
Arne True; Megyesi; Savaria Thomas A Arne: Overtures and Cantatas
Arne: Overtures / Standage, Collegium Musicum 90
This present collection admirably shows the ingenious simplicity of Arne's writing, very much in the mid-eighteenth-century English pastoral school. At the beginning of 1751, when Thomas Arne published his 'Eight Overtures in 8 Parts', he had become the leading exponent of English dramatic music and the only Englishman who could offer Handel serious competition in the theatre. Arne's 'Eight Overtures' belongs to a tradition of making the instrumental introductions of vocal works available for concert use and divide into two types. Nos 1, 2,4,6,7 and 9 are examples of the older French type that was invented by Lully, was used in England from the 1680s onwards and is found in the majority of Handel's operas and oratorios. These overtures begin with dignified movements, often marked 'Largo' that have dotted rhythms, sharp dissonances to push the music along, and ornamental 'tirades' to create a sense of excitement. By contrast, overtures Nos 3 and 6 are really Italian sinfonias. This type of overture was developed in the early eighteenth century by Alessandro Scarlatti and his contemporaries, and usually consists of three movements: a bustling fast movement, a soulful slow movement and a minuet. As Arne's examples show, the Italian sinfonia was markedly more modern in musical style than the French overture. The final two overtures; 'Alfred' and 'Thomas and Sally', rarely recorded works, are also examples of the more modern Italian type.
Arne: Complete Trio Sonatas / Standage, Collegium Musicum 90
Recorded in: The Warehouse, London 11-13 March 1996 (Sonatas Nos 1-4 & 6), 28 March 2000 (Sonatas Nos 5 & 7) Producer(s) Nicholas Anderson Sound Engineer(s) Ben Connellan
Aure, T.A.: Cantatas - The School of Anacreon / Delia / Frol
Mellnäs: Passages
Arne: Four Symphonies / Adrian Shepherd, Cantilena
Recorded in: Glasgow City Hall 7 January 1985 Producer(s) Brian Couzens Sound Engineer(s) Ralph Couzens Philip Couzens (Assistant)
The Rilke Ensemble Sings Arne Mellnäs
CAPPELLA COLONIENSIS (1954-2004)
Nordheim, A.: 5 Kryptofonier / Colorazione / Link / Den Fors
Arne: Artaxerxes
A composer inextricably linked with London’s Covent Garden, Thomas Arne’s greatest opera, Artaxerxes, was premièred at the Theatre Royal, the predecessor of the Royal Opera House, on 2 February 1762, and remained in the Covent Garden repertory until the late 1830s – where it received a documented 111 performances before 1790. The young Mozart almost certainly attended a performance when he came to London in the mid-1760s, and Haydn was also acquainted with the work, enthusiastically exclaiming that he “had no idea we had such an opera in the English language.” The Mozartists, under the dynamic leadership of conductor and artistic director Ian Page, are leading exponents of the music of Mozart and his contemporaries. Originally called Classical Opera, the company was founded in 1997, and has received widespread international acclaim for its stylish and virtuosic period-instrument orchestra, its imaginative and innovative programming, and its ability to nurture and develop world-class young artists. Renowned for their fresh and insightful interpretations of well-known masterpieces as well as for their ability to bring rare and neglected works to light, they have mounted staged productions of many of Mozart’s operas. In 2015 the company launched MOZART 250, a ground-breaking 27-year project exploring the chronological trajectory of Mozart’s life, works and influences. Described by The Observer as “among the most audacious classical music scheduling ever”, this flagship project presents 250th anniversary performances of most of Mozart’s important works, placing them in context alongside other significant works by Mozart’s contemporaries.
Sounds & Sweet Airs - A Shakespeare Songbook / Sampson, Williams, Middleton
The 37 songs in this recital, written by 27 composers – male, female, English, French, Swiss, German, Romantic, modern and contemporary – bear witness to the richness of Shakespeare’s works to which this recital is dedicated. Organised in the form of a play in five acts, including prologue and epilogue, the songs, which include several duets, are in turn cheerful and sad, light and profound, classical and jazzy – thus allowing, in Carolyn Sampson’s words, ‘a breadth of responses to these great texts’. Alongside well-known melodies, such as those by Schubert, there are musical adaptations by different composers of the same texts, as well as a contemporary reflection for the two voices by Hannah Kendall exploring the question of gender fluidity and identity through the elusive character of Rosalind from As You Like It.
After many acclaimed releases on BIS, including Album für die Frau, a collection of songs by Clara and Robert Schumann, A Soprano’s Schubertiade and Elysium, two Schubert recitals, as well as a number of themed recitals, some of which were named ‘Recording of the Month’ by MusicWeb International and ‘CD-Tipp’ by BR Klassik, Carolyn Sampson and Joseph Middleton are joined here by renowned British baritone Roderick Williams.
REVIEW:
Soprano Carolyn Sampson and baritone Roderick Williams are prolific singers who can handle almost any kind of repertory but have a strong connection to the English tradition from the Baroque to the 20th century. It would be hard to imagine better singers for this collection of Shakespeare songs, for on one hand, Shakespeare settings are about as traditional as one can get, while on the other, this is an exceptionally diverse collection. Listeners unaware that Haydn set Shakespeare should make it their business to hear Sampson in She never told her love, as soon as possible. There are settings of German Shakespeare translations by Schubert, Schumann, and Hugo Wolf, a French one by Arthur Honegger, and an entrancing English-language Fancy by Poulenc. This album represents, in short, an embarrassment of riches, and it is one of the finest Shakespeare song releases to come along in quite some time.
-- AllMusic.com (James Manheim)
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