Composer
Douglas Lilburn (1915-2001)
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Douglas Lilburn has for decades been considered to be New Zealand's premier composer. He studied at the University of Canterbury and at the Royal College of Music with Vaughan Williams. He taught for many years at the Victoria University at Wellington. In addition to a large body of instrumental works, he has also composed in the field of electronic music, an important work here being The Return, a sound image setting of a poem by Alistair Campbell.
His Aotearoa Overture is one of his most popular works. The word means "Land of the Long White Cloud" and was what New Zealanders called their country before the Dutch arrived and renamed it. A brief work of elegantly overlaid sustained chords, restrained and touching.
The Third Symphony of 1961 is a remarkable work for its refined style and intelligent working of limited materials; in one movement made up of five interrelated sections, Lilburn's post-Romanticism winds through many groups of variations and ends quite unexpectedly in a sort of broken coda. If his style might be compared to anyone's it might be Arthur Bliss with a touch of Havergal Brian.
The three symphonies have been recorded by the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra on a Continuum CD #1069; His Diversions for Strings (1947) and Landfall in Unknown Seas for speaker and orchestra (1942) are available on a CD from Koch International #7260.
© Philip Krumm, All Music Guide
His Aotearoa Overture is one of his most popular works. The word means "Land of the Long White Cloud" and was what New Zealanders called their country before the Dutch arrived and renamed it. A brief work of elegantly overlaid sustained chords, restrained and touching.
The Third Symphony of 1961 is a remarkable work for its refined style and intelligent working of limited materials; in one movement made up of five interrelated sections, Lilburn's post-Romanticism winds through many groups of variations and ends quite unexpectedly in a sort of broken coda. If his style might be compared to anyone's it might be Arthur Bliss with a touch of Havergal Brian.
The three symphonies have been recorded by the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra on a Continuum CD #1069; His Diversions for Strings (1947) and Landfall in Unknown Seas for speaker and orchestra (1942) are available on a CD from Koch International #7260.
© Philip Krumm, All Music Guide
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Orchestral Works
15 tracks
- Aotearoa, overture for orchestra
1 track
- A Birthday Offering, for orchestra
1 track
- Drysdale Overture, for orchestra
1 track
- Forest, tone poem for orchestra
1 track
- A Song of Islands, tone poem for orchestra
1 track
- Festival Overture, for orchestra
1 track
- Processional Fanfare, for orchestra
1 track
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Symphonies
8 tracks
- Symphony No.1
3 tracks
- Symphony No.2 in C
4 tracks
- Symphony No.3
1 track
- Symphony No.1
- Aotearoa, overture for orchestra
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Chamber Works
23 tracks
- Pieces (17), for guitar
17 tracks
- Pieces (2), for guitar (unpublished)
2 tracks
- Canzonas (4), for guitar
4 tracks
- Pieces (17), for guitar
Below are works by D.Lilburn that every music lover should explore:



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