Nocturne (Britten)
Nocturne for tenor, 7 obligato instruments & strings is song cycle by Benjamin Britten. Premiered at the Leeds Festival in October 1958, it is his third and final orchestral song cycle, after Les Illuminations (1939) and Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings (1943). It is dedicated to Alma Mahler.
The theme of the piece (as it's name suggests) is sleep and darkness, both in the literal and figurative sense. In this respect the work is reminiscent of Britten's earlier Serenade.
Structure
The piece sets eight poems to music, each accompanied by strings and the central poems also by an obligato instrument:
- Shelley - Prometheus Unbound
- Tennyson - The Kraken, with Bassoon
- Coleridge - The Wanderings of Cain (extract), with Harp
- Middleton - Blurt, Master Constable, , with French Horn
- Wordsworth - The Prelude (extract), with Timpani
- Owen - The Kind Ghosts, with Cor Anglais
- Keats - Sleep and Poetry, with Flute and Clarinet
- Shakespeare - Sonnet XLIII
Unlike Serenade, Nocturne is presented as a continuous piece, rather than being in separate movements. This is emphasised by a number of figures which occur throughout, most notably the 'rocking' string motif which opens the work.