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Elgar: The Fringes of the Fleet - Duncan Rock (baritone); Laurence Meikle (baritone); Nicholas Lester (baritone); Roderick Williams (baritone);...
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  1. Plymouth Hoe (A Nautical Overture), for orchestra
  2. The Fringes of the Fleet, pieces (4) for baritone solo, 3 baritones & orchestra
  3. Big Streamers, for unison chorus & piano
  4. The soldier, for voice & piano (from Songs (2) 1917-1918)
  5. Blow out you Bugles, for voice & piano
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  1. Plymouth Hoe (A Nautical Overture), for orchestra
  2. The Fringes of the Fleet, pieces (4) for baritone solo, 3 baritones & orchestra
  3. Big Streamers, for unison chorus & piano
  4. The soldier, for voice & piano (from Songs (2) 1917-1918)
  5. Blow out you Bugles, for voice & piano
  6. Elegy, for string orchestra, Op. 58
  7. A Manx Rhapsody, for orchestra
  8. Big Steamers, for voice & piano
  9. Windjammer Overture, for pops orchestra
  10. Elizabeth of England, march for orchestra
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It seems surprising that a major work by Edward Elgar, for many years Britain's most successful composer, could only now be surfacing in full, but so it has, and it has the added virtue of being quite unlike anything else Elgar or anyone else ever wrote. The central attraction is The Fringes of the Fleet, set by Elgar during World War I to a cycle of poems by Rudyard Kipling, proclaiming the glories of the British fleet. It's a bit hard to tell from the notes (in English only) exactly what this work looked like in ...

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