Malcolm Arnold: The Dancing Master, Op. 34
Eleanor Dennis (soprano)
Catherine Carby (mezzo-soprano)
Fiona Kimm (mezzo-soprano)
Ed Lyon (tenor)
Mark Wilde (tenor)
Graeme Broadbent (bass-baritone)
BBC Concert Orchestra
John Andrews (conductor)
Originally intended as an opera for television, Malcolm Arnold’s collaboration with film-maker and librettist Joe Mendoza, The Dancing Master, Op. 34, was considered too racy for viewers in the 1950s and subsequently rejected for broadcast and largely forgotten. Conductor John Andrews, with the BBC Concert Orchestra and a stellar cast, breathes new life into this operatic gem, here receiving its first recording.
With its cast of larger-than life Restoration caricatures – the trapped heiress, the scheming maid, the over-protective guardian, and the handsome rake – the opera showcases Arnold’s taste for exuberant satire and tender Romanticism in equal measure.
Album Booklet (PDF)
The Dancing Master, Op. 34 (1952)
1. Introduction – “Miranda!”
2. “Open Miranda! Open, I say!”
3. “Serviteur, serviteur, la cousine!”
4. “Oh Miss”
5. “Over the mountains and over the waves”
6. “Mais j’insiste, Miss Prue”
7. “Who gave you leave, Miss Impudence?”
“Come Miranda, Come and greet
your father”
8. “How came she with adancing Master”
9. “I shall betray you, I hardly know a step”
10. “Faugh! What a silly prating coxcomb”
11. “I thought the fool would never leave us”
12. “I beg you sir, no further”
13. “A volume from the shelf I took”
14. “Lucky Miranda, she has a handsome
proper young man”
15. “Miranda… Miranda, where are you Miranda?”
16. “What? Here already?”
17. “How now, sir! Kissing her hand”
18. “I am in no dancing humour”
“Rather than lose your favour”
19. “Ah, here he is again!”
20. “For a Spaniard – Ring the Bells”
Credits
© 2020 Resonus Limited
Ⓟ 2020 BBC / Resonus Limited
The BBC word mark and logo are trade marks of the British Broadcasting Corporation and used under licence.
BBC Logo © 2007 BBC
Catalogue No. RES10269
Producer & editor: Adam Binks
Engineer: Dave Rowell
EAN: 5060262792926
Cover photograph: The dancers of the night by suteishi (istockphoto.com)
Release date: 25 September 2020