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Folk Tales: British Cello and Piano Miniatures - Antony Ingham (piano); Gerald Peregrine (cello)
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Track Listing
  1. Studies in English Folk Song (6) for cello (or violin, viola, clarinet) & piano
  2. Short Pieces (4) for violin (or cello) & piano, H. 104: No. 2. Spring Song
  3. Irish Lament, for cello & piano
  4. Romance, for bassoon & orchestra (also arr. for cello & piano), Op. 62
  5. Caprice and Elegy, for cello & chamber orchestra, RT vii/8
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  1. Studies in English Folk Song (6) for cello (or violin, viola, clarinet) & piano
  2. Short Pieces (4) for violin (or cello) & piano, H. 104: No. 2. Spring Song
  3. Irish Lament, for cello & piano
  4. Romance, for bassoon & orchestra (also arr. for cello & piano), Op. 62
  5. Caprice and Elegy, for cello & chamber orchestra, RT vii/8
  6. Folk Tale, for cello & piano
  7. Prelude for cello & piano
  8. Romance, for cello & piano, RT viii/5
  9. Cradle Song, for violin (or cello) & piano in F major, H. 96
  10. Fantasia on Greensleeves, for harp, flute & strings (arranged by R. Greaves; from the opera "Sir John in Love")
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The title of this cello-and-piano recital comes from a work by Arnold Bax, Folk Tale, written in 1918. It's not so much a pastoral work, but one inspired by Celtic mythology; sort of a condensed version of Bax's tone poems on similar themes, and it's a pleasant, vaguely evocative work. It's the centerpiece of a collection of pieces, starting with Elgar and running up to E.J. Moeran in the 1940s, that reflected, as Stephen Barlow reminds in his notes, contemporary and fresh trends in British music, no matter that they may ...

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