Severn Meadows

Marcus Farnsworth - Gurney- Songs, Vol. 2 (2024) [Official Digital Download 24/96]

Marcus Farnsworth - Gurney- Songs, Vol. 2 (2024) [Official Digital Download 24/96]
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Front Cover | Time - 01:10:58 minutes | 1.26 GB
Classical | Studio Master, Official Digital Download

This album of Gurney's songs, Volume 24 in the English Song series, presents a wide selection of his works.
Marcus Farnsworth and Eric McElroy - Gurney: Songs, Vol. 2 (2024)

Marcus Farnsworth and Eric McElroy - Gurney: Songs, Vol. 2 (2024)
FLAC (tracks), Lossless | 1:10:45 | 235 Mb
Genre: Classical

Ivor Gurney was a poet as well as a composer and was accomplished in a number of musical genres including song. With his intuitive approach to poetry he selected texts widely, from contemporaries to ballads, Elizabethan and Jacobean poets, and even set his own lyrics. This wide-ranging selection includes his masterpieces – among them Sleep and Severn Meadows – with several songs heard in their first recording. Marcus Farnsworth, First Prize winner in the 2009 Wigmore Hall International Song Competition, has been praised for his ‘superbly controlled baritone voice’ (Fanfare). This album is Volume 24 in The English Song Series on Naxos.

«The Rest of My Life» by Sheryl Browne  Audiobooks

Posted by Gelsomino at Jan. 17, 2020
«The Rest of My Life» by Sheryl Browne

«The Rest of My Life» by Sheryl Browne
English | ISBN: 9781510085855 | MP3@64 kbps | 13h 08m | 360.9 MB
National Theatre Belgrade: Seven Great Russian Operas from 1955 - Glinka: Ivan Susanin (A Life for the Tsar) (2019)

National Theatre Belgrade: Seven Great Russian Operas from 1955 - Glinka: Ivan Susanin (A Life for the Tsar) (2019)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 816 Mb | Total time: 71:32+50:49+54:39 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Profil Medien | # PH19040 | Recorded: 1955

This Edition presents the “Magnificent Seven” and the “encore” in optimum technical quality. In the mid-Fifties of the last century, with the Cold War freezing relations between East and West, the English record label Decca decided to record a series of Russian operas with the Belgrade National Opera. Belgrade in the Yugoslavia of those days under Josip Tito was more open to “the West” than the Warsaw Pact countries gathered under the wing of the Soviet Union. The deal had been struck by former Decca manager and successful promoter of east European folklore in the USA, record executive Gerald Severn. Thanks to his excellent contacts, Decca director Arthur Haddy eventually obtained a visa and travelled to Belgrade to find a suitable recording venue, which turned out to be the cinema in the House of Culture in the city centre.