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![]() ![]() So my Nocturnal functions structurally and thematically like a kind of palimpsest in that if you scrape away at the score you discover older music (Britten’s), and if you continue scraping you find even older music again (Wilbye’s). However, this work is only Britten’s through appropriation, as it is itself based on a madrigal by the English composer Thomas Wilbye (1574-1638) called ‘Happy, Oh Happy He’ from his Second Book of Madrigals (1608). I decided to pay homage to Britten in my piece by employing a theme from his opera Gloriana – the Second Lute Song of the Earl of Essex (from Act I, scene ii). This is the third installment in a 3-part historical series where Stephen Goss and Laura Snowden uncover the compositional and interpretive details inside one of the greatest pieces written for the classical guitar, Benjamin Brittens Nocturnal after John Dowland, Op. One of the most special features of the work is that the variations and passacaglia precede the theme, which emerges only at the very end of the work after the music has gone through many transformations and explorations. ![]() Britten’s guitar masterpiece is a set of variations and an extended passacaglia based on Dowland’s lute song, Come Heavy Sleep. ![]() Nocturnal, after Benjamin Britten is, of course, inspired by Britten’s work for solo guitar – his famous Nocturnal, after John Dowland, Op. ![]()
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