Irish Adventures
Donald Macleod follows Arne to Dublin, where he found success and adulation. However, not everyone was a fan and back in London, his fortunes were about to take a tumble.
Donald Macleod follows the composer to Dublin, where he hoped to capitalise on Handel's recent success there, but finds Arne's knack for making enemies catching up with him on his return to London.
Thomas Arne is remembered today, if he's remembered at all, by just a handful of popular songs. Even so, these are some of Britain's most enduring melodies. 'Rule Britannia' has its annual outing at the Last Night of the Proms, and his setting of Shakespeare's 'Where the bee sucks' remains the best known of the very many versions of that song. The lasting appeal of these tunes gives us just a hint of the fame and popularity he enjoyed as one of London's most successful stage composers in the 18th century. He had a knack for entertaining the city's well-to-do middle-classes, and wasn't afraid to pander to their more low-brow tastes if that was what put bums on seats.
His friends and colleagues, while full of praise for his art, scorned his ungentlemanly character. His self-cultivated image as a 'man of pleasure' was combined with an unscrupulous head for business that Arne inherited from his father. We can all too easily imagine him drooling with anticipation, as he took under his wing yet another talented young actress, dreaming of the riches her voice might bring him. His reputation as a lecher and a bad husband did him no favours, though, and rather tarnished his professional career.
History has not been kind to his memory. The masques and plays that served as vehicles for his music were not designed for posterity and much of his legacy has been lost. Plus, he had the misfortune to live and work alongside England's brightest musical genius, George Frederick Handel, whose brilliance consigned a whole generation of British composers to shadowy obscurity. Nevertheless, even though his story is full of missing chapters, Arne is revealed as one British music's most vibrant characters.
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Music Played
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Thomas Arne
Artaxerxes - opera Act 2 extract
Singer: Christopher Robson. Singer: Ian Partridge. Singer: Patricia Spence. Singer: Richard Edgar鈥怶ilson. Singer: Catherine Bott. Singer: Phillipa Hyde. Singer: Charles Gibbs. Ensemble: The Parley of Instruments. Conductor: Roy Goodman.- HYPERION : CDD-22073.
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Thomas Arne
Trio sonata in E minor Op.3`7 for 2 violins and continuo
Orchestra: Collegium Musicum 90.- ARNE - Trio sonata no.3 in E flat.
- CHANDOS.
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Thomas Arne
Artaxerxes - opera - Act 2 extract
Singer: Christopher Robson. Singer: Ian Partridge. Singer: Patricia Spence. Singer: Richard Edgar鈥怶ilson. Singer: Catherine Bott. Singer: Phillipa Hyde. Singer: Charles Gibbs. Ensemble: The Parley of Instruments. Conductor: Roy Goodman.- HYPERION : CDD-22073.
- HYPERION.
- 24.
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Thomas Arne
Alfred - masque extract
Singer: Jennifer Smith. Singer: David Daniels. Singer: Jamie MacDougall. Orchestra: Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra & Chorale. Choir: Philharmonia Chorale. Conductor: Nicholas McGegan.- DEUTSCHE HARMONIA MUNDI : 75605-51314 2.
- DEUTSCHE HARMONIA MUNDI.
- 9.
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Thomas Arne
The Tempest - songs from the play
Singer: Catherine Bott. Ensemble: The Parley of Instruments. Conductor: Peter Holman.- Jeremiah Clarke: Overture to Titus Andronicus.
- HYPERION.
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Broadcasts
- Wed 10 Mar 2010 12:00大象传媒 Radio 3
- Wed 10 Mar 2010 22:00大象传媒 Radio 3
- Wed 16 Apr 2014 12:00大象传媒 Radio 3
- Wed 16 Apr 2014 18:30大象传媒 Radio 3
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