Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Peter Warlock" ¶ 13
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Heseltine's and for
The name, which reflects Heseltine's interest in occult practices, was used for all his published musical works.
Delius would become the first strong formative influence of Heseltine's compositional career, and although the initial worship was later modified, a correspondence and friendship began that would largely endure for the remainder of Heseltine's life.
Although Heseltine's enthusiasm for Delius's music was diminished, he accepted Beecham's assignment, and travelled to Grez in search of forgotten compositions that could be resurrected for the festival.
He was delighted to discover Cynara, for voice and orchestra, abandoned since 1907, though Delius's assistant Eric Fenby was shocked by Heseltine's private disparaging of much of Delius's work.
Sewell's mother, unnamed, was a Roman Catholic lover who refused Heseltine's offer to pay for an abortion.
Heseltine's surviving body of work includes about 150 songs, mostly for solo voice and piano.
In 1917 – 18 Heseltine's passion for Celtic culture, stimulated by his stay in Ireland, brought a new element to his music, and in 1921 he discovered Bartók.
The music critic Ernest Bradbury comments that Heseltine's songs " serve both singer and poet, the one in their memorably tuneful vocal lines, the other in a scrupulous regard for correct accentuation free from any suggestion of pedantry ".
On the loss to English music, Newman considered some of Heseltine's choral compositions " among the finest music written for massed voices by a modern Englishman.

Heseltine's and Daily
During Heseltine's four months at the Daily Mail, about 30 notices appeared above his initials, mainly short reports of musical events but occasionally with some analysis.

Heseltine's and was
Heseltine's decision to reuse the old title caused some comment and it was discovered that the Board of Trade had not in fact met since the mid-nineteenth century.
According to Cecil Gray, Heseltine's first biographer, " did not rest until he had procured every work of Delius which was then accessible ".
This advice was later sharply criticised by Beecham, who knew both men, on the grounds of Heseltine's immaturity and instability: " Frederick should never have committed the psychological blunder of preaching the doctrine of relentless determination to someone incapable of receiving it ".
However, Heseltine's letters show that during this period he was depressed and insecure, lacking any clear sense of purpose.
A more significant event in Heseltine's musical life, late in 1916, was his introduction to the Dutch composer Bernard van Dieren.
By the summer of 1917, as Allied fortunes in the war stagnated, Heseltine's military exemption came under review ; to forestall the possibility of conscription, in August 1917 he moved to Ireland, taking Puma, with whom he had decided he was, after all, in love.
The composer Denis ApIvor has suggested that Heseltine's obsession with the occult was finally curbed through his interactions in Dublin with a theosophist group, which reawakened an interest in religious philosophies to which he had been first introduced by Kaikhosru Sorabji, the composer who had first sparked Heseltine's interest in the music of Bartók.
Orr was particularly struck by Heseltine's whistling abilities which he describes as " flute-like in quality and purity ".
For the next few years most of Heseltine's energy was devoted to musical criticism and journalism.
By this time, Heseltine's private opinion of Delius's music was increasingly critical, although in public he continued to sing his mentor's praises.
Heseltine's recognition as an emerging composer was marked by the selection of The Curlew as one of the works representing contemporary British music at the 1924 Salzburg Festival.
Heseltine's major literary work of this period was the completion of a biography of Delius, the first full-length study of the composer.
Most commentators have considered suicide the more likely cause ; Peache and Heseltine's close friend Lionel Jellinek both recalled that he had previously threatened to take his life by gas, and the outline of a new will was found among the papers in the flat.
In 2011 the art critic Brian Sewell published his memoirs, in which he revealed that he was Heseltine's illegitimate son, born in July 1931 seven month's after the composer's death.
Heseltine's music was generally well received by public and critics.
In a tribute published in The Musical Times, van Dieren referred to Heseltine's music as " a national treasure " that would long survive all that was currently being said or written about it.

Heseltine's and ;
Beecham responded angrily ; Heseltine's scheme, he said, would " be launched and and controlled by persons without the smallest experience of theatrical life ".
The Welsh years were marked by intense creative compositional and literary activity ; some of Heseltine's best-known vocal works, including the song-cycles Lilligay and The Curlew were completed, along with numerous songs and choral settings, and a strings serenade composed to honour Delius's 60th birthday.
The final summer of Heseltine's life wss marked by gloom, depression, and inactivity ; ApIvor refers to Heseltine's sense of " crimes against the spirit ", and an obsession with imminent death.

Heseltine's and later
This dispute stimulated Heseltine's own creative powers, and in his final two weeks in Ireland he wrote ten songs, including some later acknowledged by critics as among his finest work.
Much later, Nigel Heseltine introduced a new theory — that his father had been murdered by van Dieren, the sole beneficiary of Heseltine's 1920 will which stood to be revoked by the new one.

Heseltine's and material
Mayhew sent a reply to Heseltine, noting " material inaccuracies " in Heseltine's letter.

Heseltine's and .
During the leadership election, Lamont clashed angrily in private with Nigel Lawson who preferred Michael Heseltine as Thatcher's successor, phoning Lawson up to remind him of his caustic remarks made about Heseltine's economic policies.
Although the party's election literature featured Ken Clarke, asking voters " Are you more a Clarke Conservative than a Hague Conservative ?," Clarke did not approve of the party or its campaign and with Michael Heseltine met with the PECP at Heseltine's home in May 1999 to try to persuade them not to stand.
The social centre of Heseltine's life now became the Café Royal, in Regent Street, where among others he met Cecil Gray, a young Scottish composer with whom he set up home in a Battersea studio.
This meeting began a friendship that provided a lasting infuence on Heseltine's future career.
Likewise, Heseltine's on-off friendship with Lawrence finally died, after a thinly disguised and unflattering depiction of Heseltine and Puma (" Halliday " and " Pussum ") appeared in Women in Love, published in 1922.
Puma, meanwhile, had disappeared from Heseltine's life.
The other permanent Eynsford residents were Hal Collins, a New Zealand Māori who acted as a general factotum, and Barbara Peache, Heseltine's long-term girlfriend whom he had known since the early 1920s.
These two are the only recordings of Heseltine's music issued in his lifetime.

last and notice
He also complained that not enough notice was given on the hearing, since the bill was introduced only last Monday.
An American student named Charlotte Adams had refused to take notice of his evident aversion to people and had at last succeeded in getting him to talk to her.
The last notice of him is in, where he leaves Paul in Rome in order to travel to Dalmatia.
Periodical publications about manufacturing and technology began to appear in the last decade of the 18th century, and many regularly included notice of the latest patents.
We may reasonably suppose, that, when he rose to notice, he did not want the counsels and admonitions of scholars and critics, and that he at last deliberately persisted in a practice, which he might have begun by chance.
The orchestral premiere of The Planets suite, conducted at Holst's request by Adrian Boult, was held at short notice on 29 September 1918, during the last weeks of World War I, in the Queen's Hall with the financial support of Holst's friend and fellow composer H. Balfour Gardiner It was hastily rehearsed ; the musicians of the Queen's Hall Orchestra first saw the complicated music only two hours before the performance, and the choir for " Neptune " was recruited from pupils from St Paul's Girls ' School ( where Holst taught ).
This equipment was requested on short notice after another computer manufacturer backed out at the last minute.
For the following decade there is no notice of Amadeus's activities, and his last action was record on 10 December 1051.
The local policeman receives a notice from the French government announcing a reward for the return of the couple, but Matahi bribes him with his last pearl.
Misconceptions about the countertenor voice were common at the time Deller was first gaining significant notice as a singer, which was only a matter of decades after the last castrati had died ; Michael Chance tells the story that once, a French woman, upon hearing Deller sing, exclaimed " Monsieur, vous êtes eunuque "— to which Deller replied, " I think you mean ' unique ,' madam.
The group knew that it would be our last album together because I had given notice that I was going to leave.
The notice of the incorporation election was posted in the Dyersville Commercial for several weeks, with the last notice being published on February 17, 1893.
Under the pretext that Western demonstrations required it, the East closed the checkpoint at the Brandenburg Gate the same day, ' until further notice ', a situation that was to last until 22 December 1989.
Osbourne cancelled at short notice leaving the organisers searching for a last minute replacement.
Porson at first took no notice of either, but went on with his Euripides, publishing the Orestes in 1798, the Phoenissae in 1799 and the Medea in 1801, the last printed at the Cambridge press, and with the editor's name on the title-page.
The Sopranos finale caused millions of viewers to temporarily believe they had lost cable service due to an abrupt blackout finale ; the final scene left open the fate of Tony Soprano ( series creator David Chase had wanted the cut to black to last for several minutes and take the place of post-show credits, so that the first thing the audience would see was an HBO notice, but the network refused this and there was a very short jump from the final shot to the credits ).
The writer of the obituary notice in The Times stated that he was a very religious man who during his last years did much lecturing to young people's clubs and debating societies.
: Your letter of yesterday is received & I hasten to answer as fully as I can -- Joseph Smith Jr first come to my notice in the year 1824 in the summer of that year I contracted with his father to build a fence on my property in the corse of that work I approach Joseph & ask how it is in a half day you put up what requires your father & 2 brothers a full day working together he says I have not been with out assistance but can not say more only you better find out the next day I take the older Smith by the arm & he says Joseph can see any thing he wishes by looking at a stone Joseph often sees Spirits here with great kettles of coin money it was Spirits who brought up rock because Joseph made no attempt on their money I latter dream I converse with spirits which let me count their money when I awake I have in my hand a dollar coin which I take for a sign Joseph describes what I seen in every particular says he the spirits are grieved so I through back the dollar in the fall of the year 1827 I hear Joseph found a gold bible I take Joseph aside & he says it is true I found it 4 years ago with my stone but only just got it because of the enchantment the old spirit come to me 3 times in the same dream & says dig up the gold but when I take it up the next morning the spirit transfigured himself from a white salamander in the bottom of the hole & struck me 3 times & held the treasure & would not let me have it because I lay it down to cover over the hole when the spirit says do not lay it down Joseph says when can I have it the spirit says one year from to day if you obay me look to the stone after a few days he looks the spirit says bring your brother Alvin Joseph says he is dead shall I bring what remains but the spirit is gone Joseph goes to get the gold bible but the spirit says you did not bring your brother you can not have it look to the stone Joseph looks but can not see who to bring the spirit says I tricked you again look to the stone Joseph looks & sees his wife on the 22d day of Sept 1827 they get the gold bible -- I give Joseph $ 50 to move him down to Pa Joseph says when you visit me I will give you a sign he gives me some hiroglyphics I take then to Utica Albany & New York in the last place Dr Mitchel gives me an introduction to Professor Anthon says he they are short hand Egyption the same what was used in ancient times bring me the old book & I will translate says I it is made of precious gold & is sealed from view says he I can not read a sealed book -- Joseph found some giant silver specticles with the plates he puts them in an old hat & in the darkness reads the words & in this way it is all translated & written down -- about the middle of June 1829 Joseph takes me together with Oliver Cowdery & David Whitmer to have a view of the plates our names are appended to the book of Mormon which I had printed with my own money -- space and time both prevent me from writing more at present if there is any thing further you wish to inquire I shall attend to it
She sang her first Desdemona in Glasgow in 1972 while her Metropolitan Opera debut in 1974 as Desdemona in Otello took place at short notice, replacing an ill Teresa Stratas at the last minute.
This last one halved the representation of Durham City, thus giving him statutory notice to quit.
" Whereas Mr Edmund Scarburgh, Mr Thomas Johnson, Mr Richard Vaughan, Captain John Dollinge, John Robinson, Toby Norton, Richard Baily, Ambrose Dixon, Richard Hill, Jenkin Price And divers others Inhabitants and free men in the Upper parte of the parish in the Countie of Northampton Did in a Hostile manner ( contrary to the knowne Lawes of Virginia And the League made with the Indians ) upon the 28th day of Aprill last past Rayse a partie of men to the number of fiftie persons with Armes and ammunicon And upon the aforesaid daie marched amonge the Indians with a Resolucon to take or kill the Queene of Pocamoke, shott att Indians, slashed and cut read, Took Indyans prisoner, And bound one of them with a Chayne, which said Accons caused the Indyans To Invade the Countie, to the great danger of our Lives and Estate, It is therefore ordered That the Sherriff shall forthwith Arrest the Bodies of all the abovesaid parties And such other ( upon inquiry ) as hee shall have notice of ( which went out against the indyans upon their Designe ) To the Number of 50 persons and that hee keepe them in his custodie until they enter into bonds to make their personal appearance at James Citty to answer the premisses before the Governor and Council upon th XXIth day of this Instant Moneth ( att the suite of our Sovereign King ).
The notice must also state the effective date of termination, which, in some jurisdictions, must be on the last day of the payment period.
In other words, if a month-to-month tenancy began on the 15th of the month, in a jurisdiction with a last day requirement the termination could not be effective on the 20th of the following month, even though this would give the tenant more than the required one month's notice.

2.177 seconds.