Butterworth: A Shropshire Lad, Two Idylls, Banks of Green Willow

 
Butterworth: A Shropshire Lad, Two Idylls, Banks of Green Willow cover
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GEORGE BUTTERWORTH / GUSTAV HOLST
Butterworth: A Shropshire Lad, Two Idylls, Banks of Green Willow
Andrew Manze, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra

[ Onyx / CD ]

Release Date: Friday 26 September 2025

This item is currently out of stock. It may take 6 or more weeks to obtain from when you place your order as this is a specialist product.

George Butterworth, one of the pre 1914 generation lost in the Great War, left a small but enduring body of work. He was introduced to folk music by Vaughan Williams, but he was also a dancer and collector of folk songs and dances - especially those from Sussex. It is however his A.E Houseman inspired orchestral Rhapsody 'A Shropshire Lad' that has become his most famous composition and seems to conjure up a powerful sense of the countryside of that county, and melancholy at the waste and futility of war.

Holst, like Butterworth was a friend of RVW, and together the two of them collected folk songs from around England. Holst also taught at the school for girls in Hammersmith, London and the St Paul Suite is a personal thank you to the school. Folk songs imbue the two Songs without Words. Holst became friendly with Thomas Hardy, and it was on a night walk (at the urging of Hardy) that the inspiration for Egdon Heath came to Holst.

The 15-minute-long work capture the 'singularly colossal and mysterious in its swarthy monotony' as Hardy described the area of moorland in his novel The Return of the Native. The high trumpet at the close of the work is surely sounding from post war sad shires.