
The Europadisc Review
Haydn - The Seasons
Jordi Savall, Lina Johnson (soprano), Tilman Lichdi (tenor), Matthias Winckhler (ba...
£18.35
Composed over two years spanning the very dawn of the 19th century, Haydn’s four-part oratorio The Seasons (Die Jahreszeiten) was designed to capitalise on the huge popularity of The Creation. Once again, Haydn’s collaborator was the diplomat, librarian and librettist, Baron Gottfried van Swieten. As with The Creation, the libretto was based on an English-language source, in this case the sprawling, diffuse but highly influential poem The Seasons (1726–1730) by the Scotsman John Thomson (whose other claim to fame is the lyrics of ‘Rule, Britann... read more
Composed over two years spanning the very dawn of the 19th century, Haydn’s four-part oratorio The Seasons (Die Jahreszeiten) was designed to capitalise on the huge popularity of The Creation. Once again, Haydn’s collaborator was the diplomat, librar... read more
Haydn - The Seasons

Jordi Savall, Lina Johnson (soprano), Tilman Lichdi (tenor), Matthias Winckhler (bass-baritone), La Capella Nacional de Catalunya, Le Concert des Nations
The Spin Doctor Europadisc's Weekly Column

Celebrating Coleridge-Taylor 20th August 2025
20th August 2025
Although these days larger than some British cities, the South London suburb of Croydon is not known for its composers. Alongside more recent candidates such as singer-songwriters Kirsty MacColl (1959–2000) and Ralph McTell (b.1944), there are such figures as William Hurlstone (1876–1906) and Joseph Holbrooke (1878–1958). But undoubtedly Croydon’s most famous composer-son is Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875–1912), who achieved immortality through the astonishing turn-of-the-century success of his cantata Hiawatha’s Wedding Feast (1898), the first of a trilogy of choral works collectively entitled The Song of Hiawatha which set texts from the eponymous 1855 epic poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Tapping into the cult of the exotic and the romantic appeal of all things native American, Hiawatha’s Wedding Feast brought Coleridge-Taylor immediate transatlantic fame, although –... read more