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About this concert
British tenor Ian Bostridge is known worldwide as one of the most fascinating singers of our time. ‘He is a story-teller and a singing-actor par excellence, with an immense range of emotional expression’, wrote the London Evening Standard about this PhD historian who studied at Cambridge and Oxford. Together with Belgian ensemble Oxalys, Bostridge embarks on a journey through the lovely landscapes of his native England with English music from the Belle Époque by Ralph Vaughan Williams, Peter Warlock, and Gustav Holst. Around the year 1900, skirts swished across European ballrooms, and Mata Hari danced in the Parisian salons frequented by literary giants like Oscar Wilde and musical innovators like Claude Debussy. In the music of conservative England, where everything is always done differently, the serene atmosphere of rural tranquillity set the tone. Ian Bostridge has the ideal golden serrated timbre for the British romanticism of Gustav Holt and Ralph Vaughan Williams. He also sings songs by the lesser-known Peter Warlock, who was inspired by music from the time of Queen Elizabeth I, but also embraced Debussy’s harmonies.
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Event Lineup
Gustav Holst
22.9K Followers
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Ralph Vaughan Williams
11.8K Followers
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Ian Bostridge
2.22K Followers
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Peter Warlock
887 Followers
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Felix White
222 Followers
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Oxalys
89 Followers
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About the venue

Muziekgebouw is Amsterdam's concert hall for contemporary and newly composed music as well as related genres such as classical, jazz, electronic and global music. More th...
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Ralph Vaughan Williams Biography

Ralph Vaughan Williams, OM (1872–1958) was an influential English composer.

Vaughan Williams was born on 12th October 1872 in Down Ampney, a village in the Cotswolds. After attending Charterhouse School and Trinity College, Cambridge, he became a student at the Royal College of Music; he later studied with Max Bruch in Berlin and Maurice Ravel in Paris.

He served as a lieutenant in World War I, having volunteered for the Field Ambulance Service; the appalling carnage affected him deeply, as did the deaths of close friends such as George Butterworth.

He wrote nine symphonies between 1910 and 1958, as well as numerous other works including chamber music, opera, choral music, and film scores. He was also one of the first serious collectors of English folk music and served as president of the English Folk Dance and Song Society (EFDSS). The Society's Vaughan Williams Memorial Library is named for him.

Vaughan Williams died on 26th August 1958, and his ashes are interred in Westminster Abbey.
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Classical
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