Composer
Peter Warlock (1894-1930); ENG
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Peter Warlock was born Philip Heseltine in the Savoy Hotel, the only son of a London solicitor. His father died when he was two, and Heseltine was raised by his mother. He was educated in the English public schools, and was encouraged in his passion for music by a teacher at Eton, Colin Taylor. Outside of that, he had little or no significant musical training. In 1908, Heseltine discovered the music of Frederick Delius and was enraptured by his work; upon meeting Delius in 1911, a lifelong friendship ensued. Heseltine entered Oxford in 1913, but soon dropped out, relocating to London to work as music critic for the Daily Mail. With the outbreak of war, Heseltine was deemed unfit for military duty. In 1916 adopted the pen name "Peter Warlock" amid a host of others used in his criticism. When he began to compose seriously around 1918, this was the pseudonym that Heseltine favored for his original work.
In 1918, Warlock and composer Cecil Gray undertook publication of The Sackbut, a periodical dedicated to informed and lively discussion of the contemporary music world. Warlock held this post until the magazine was absorbed into the house of publisher J.C. Curwen in 1921. Warlock also turned his attention to English music of past eras, particularly that of the Elizabethan age. He would edit a great deal of this "ancient" music for modern publication, and Warlock's editions are of such a high standard that generations of subsequent research have failed to unseat many of them. In 1923, he composed his song cycle to poems of Yeats, The Curlew, which represented Britain in the 1924 ISCM Festival in Salzburg. That same year, he scored three Christmas carols for the Bach Choir; this set contained the ethereal and mystic Balulalow, since becoming a choral staple of the Yuletide season. Warlock's Capriol Suite, his best known orchestral work, was completed in 1926. Another famous Christmas carol, Bethlehem Down, made its bow in The London Daily Telegraph's Christmas Eve edition of 1927. He published book length essays on Delius, Gesualdo, and Thomas Whythorne.
In early 1929, Thomas Beecham named Warlock editor of MILO (The Magazine of the Imperial League of Opera). Only three issues appeared before the magazine folded. Warlock fell into a deep depression, unable to find work and drinking heavily. On December 17, 1930, Warlock's landlady phoned her utility company as there was a strong smell of gas coming from Warlock's flat. Once inside, the police found Warlock dead from asphyxiation at the age of 36.
Warlock's main output consists of songs, written in a modern style, characterized by extroverted ebulliance on one hand and serene, transparent calm on the other. Critics who deal with Warlock sometimes attempt to present him as a kind of schizophrenic, transporting good qualities to "Heseltine" and bad to "Warlock." From reminiscences of his friends, it seems a more complex situation. Heseltine/Warlock was an alcoholic, a naughty limericks writer, and a sadist who often lashed out in the press against bad performances and the opinions of writers, particularly Edwin Newman, whose views offended him. Warlock's music was of its own special category; as conductor/composer Constant Lambert noted in 1938, "It would be an easy matter for me to write down the names of at least 30 of [Warlock's] songs which are flawless in inspiration and workmanship. It is no exaggeration to say that this achievement entitles him to be classed with Dowland, Mussorgsky, and Debussy as one of the greatest song writers that music has known." © Uncle Dave Lewis, All Music Guide
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Peter Warlock was born Philip Heseltine in the Savoy Hotel, the only son of a London solicitor. His father died... More
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Vocal Works
79 tracks
- Solo Songs and Song Cycles
70 tracks
- After Two Years
1 track
- And wilt thou leave me thus?
1 track
- As Ever I Saw
1 track
- Away to Twiver
1 track
- The Bachelor
1 track
- Balulalow
4 tracks
- The Bayley Berith the Bell Away
1 track
- The Birds
1 track
- Bright is the ring of words
1 track
- Captain Stratton's Fancy
2 tracks
- Chopcherry, for voice and string quartet
1 track
- The Cloths of Heaven
1 track
- Cradle Song
1 track
- The Cricketers of Hambledon
1 track
- The Curlew, song cycle for voice and small orchestra
5 tracks
- Fair and true
1 track
- Frostbound Wood
3 tracks
- The Fox
1 track
- Ha'nacker Mill
1 track
- Jilian of Berry
2 tracks
- Lillygay, song cycle
3 tracks
- Lullaby
1 track
- Mr. Belloc's Fancy
1 track
- My Ghostly Fader
1 track
- My Own Country
2 tracks
- Passing By
1 track
- Peter Warlock's Fancy
2 tracks
- Peterisms, first set, song cycle
3 tracks
- Peterisms, second set, song cycle
4 tracks
- Pretty Ring Time
2 tracks
- Rest Sweet Nymphs
1 track
- Robin Goodfellow
1 track
- Romance
1 track
- Rutterkin
1 track
- A Sad Song
1 track
- Saudades, 3 songs
3 tracks
- Seven Songs of Summer
3 tracks
- Sigh No more, ladies
1 track
- Sleep
1 track
- Sweet-And-Twenty
1 track
- There is a Lady
1 track
- To the Memory of A Great Singer
1 track
- Twelve Oxen
1 track
- Whenas the Rye
1 track
- Yarmouth Fair
1 track
- After Two Years
-
Choral Works
9 tracks
- Benedicamus Domino
1 track
- Bethlehem Down
5 tracks
- Corpus Christi
1 track
- Lullaby my Jesus (arr. by Andrew Carter from Capriol Suite)
2 tracks
- Benedicamus Domino
- Solo Songs and Song Cycles
-
Orchestral Works
46 tracks
- Serenade
3 tracks
- Capriol Suite
43 tracks
- Serenade
-
Orchestral Works
5 tracks
- Capriol Suite
5 tracks
- Capriol Suite
-
Orchestral Works
2 midis
- Serenade
1 midi
- Capriol Suite
1 midi
- Serenade
-
Vocal Works
79 tracks
- Solo Songs and Song Cycles
70 tracks
- After Two Years
1 track
- And wilt thou leave me thus?
1 track
- As Ever I Saw
1 track
- Away to Twiver
1 track
- The Bachelor
1 track
- Balulalow
4 tracks
- The Bayley Berith the Bell Away
1 track
- The Birds
1 track
- Bright is the ring of words
1 track
- Captain Stratton's Fancy
2 tracks
- Chopcherry, for voice and string quartet
1 track
- The Cloths of Heaven
1 track
- Cradle Song
1 track
- The Cricketers of Hambledon
1 track
- The Curlew, song cycle for voice and small orchestra
5 tracks
- Fair and true
1 track
- Frostbound Wood
3 tracks
- The Fox
1 track
- Ha'nacker Mill
1 track
- Jilian of Berry
2 tracks
- Lillygay, song cycle
3 tracks
- Lullaby
1 track
- Mr. Belloc's Fancy
1 track
- My Ghostly Fader
1 track
- My Own Country
2 tracks
- Passing By
1 track
- Peter Warlock's Fancy
2 tracks
- Peterisms, first set, song cycle
3 tracks
- Peterisms, second set, song cycle
4 tracks
- Pretty Ring Time
2 tracks
- Rest Sweet Nymphs
1 track
- Robin Goodfellow
1 track
- Romance
1 track
- Rutterkin
1 track
- A Sad Song
1 track
- Saudades, 3 songs
3 tracks
- Seven Songs of Summer
3 tracks
- Sigh No more, ladies
1 track
- Sleep
1 track
- Sweet-And-Twenty
1 track
- There is a Lady
1 track
- To the Memory of A Great Singer
1 track
- Twelve Oxen
1 track
- Whenas the Rye
1 track
- Yarmouth Fair
1 track
- After Two Years
-
Choral Works
9 tracks
- Benedicamus Domino
1 track
- Bethlehem Down
5 tracks
- Corpus Christi
1 track
- Lullaby my Jesus (arr. by Andrew Carter from Capriol Suite)
2 tracks
- Benedicamus Domino
- Solo Songs and Song Cycles
-
Orchestral Works
46 tracks, 2 midis
- Serenade
3 tracks, 1 midi
- Capriol Suite
43 tracks, 1 midi
- Serenade


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