Lincolnshire Posy Background
Lincolnshire Posy Background
Lincolnshire Posy Background
Lincolnshire Posy
based on English Folksong gathered in Lincolnshire
For Military Band
Interesting to note that the quality of this piece remains largely unchanged
in either the wind ensemble setting or the standard concert band setting.
Background of piece:
Foreword detailing the creation of this full-score from the compressed full
score, by Frederick Fennell.
Details regarding the source of the folksongs used, and who was
responsible for recording/noting down the tune.
II. Horkstow Grange (The Miser and his Man: A Local Tragedy
2:58
a. Db major, mixed meter, Slowly Flowing, Singingly
b. A one-ocatve folk tune from dominant to dominant
c. Form: a-a1-b-c
d. Two verse/refrain pairings
e. Ends with remote sounding half-cadence
f. Folksong suggests injustice on a broader scale: an innocent man
is beaten in a public square, perhaps for the crime of being
stupid. By implication, the onlookers do nothing to stop the
beating.
g. Begian notes that this tempo marking was closer to dotted
quarter = 76, rather than quarter = 76.
I. Lisbon
Chorus:
Chorus:
V. Lord Melbourne
I am an Englishman to my birth,
Lord Melbourne is my name;
In Devonshire I first drew breath,
that place of noble fame.
I was beloved by all my men,
by kings and princes likewise.
I never failed in anything,
but won great victories.
[[[When she saw him, she knew him, and fled to his arms;
She told him her grief while he gazed on her charms.
How came you to Dublin, my dearest, I pray?
Three gypsies betrayed me and stole me away.]]]
Program Note:
Lincolnshire Posy Percy Aldridge Grainger
(18821961)
Grainger was born in Melbourne, Australia and was schooled mostly under
the auspices of his mother. By the age of 13, he had made his debut as a solo
pianist and was soon moving to Frankfurt to study at the Hoch Conservatory.
Following his education in Germany, he moved to London with his mother and
slowly established himself as an international concert pianist. However talented
he was at the piano, he always had a yearning to compose. It was during this
period that Grainger toured the English countryside collecting folk songs straight
from the source: often working-class, common folk. Graingers interest in this
collecting was not of merely arranging these songs into neat compositions, but
rather to emphasize the way the singer presented the songs, with the resulting
rhythms, inflections, and ornaments.
The wind ensemble masterwork Lincolnshire Posy is Graingers settings of
five folk songs he collected from the area of Lincolnshire from 190506. (The sixth
and last movement, The Lost Lady Found, was collected by his friend, Lucy E.
Broadwood.) Written upon the request of the fledgling American Bandmasters
Association in 1937, this monumental work was composed straight to the
instrumental parts, without a score! Perhaps this is why the first edition is fraught
with mistakes, leading legendary wind band conductor Frederick Fennell
to publish a full-score, corrected edition in 1987. The premiere was on March 7,
1937 by a professional band hired by Grainger. Due to the difficulty of the music,
the performance only included 3 of the 6 movements. Six months later, the
Goldman Band performed all 6 movements for the first time.
I. Lisbon
Originally entitled Dublin Bay, the first movement of Lincolnshire Posy is
the shortesta brisk, simple, lilted melody in 6/8 time. The main theme
of the movement is presented first in the muted trumpets and bassoon,
and is set against a war-like motif in the horns. Like the fourth
movement, this movement ends in a serene, suspended pianissimo that
contrasts the general tone of the movement as a whole.
V. Lord Melbourne
A fierce and heavy war song opens in free time, where each note is
conducted out of time, which is followed by a lyrical trumpet solo. As the
movement progresses, it slides rapidly into different time signatures
including unusual times such as "2.5/4" and "1.5/4" as well as in and out
of "free time" as the war song is restated.
http://lincolnshireposy.weebly.com/history-of-lincolnshire-posy.html
Extra resources:
https://koopsconducting.wikispaces.com/Lincolnshire+Posy