Songs of Farewell is a set of six choral
motets by the British composer
Hubert Parry. The pieces were composed between 1916 and 1918 and were among his last compositions before his death.
Background
The songs were written during the
First World War when a number of Parry's pupils at the
Royal College of Music were being killed in action. Parry's choice of texts are thought to reflect a yearning to escape the violence of a world at war, and to find peace in a heavenly realm. In contrast to Parry's assured 1916 setting of
William Blake's poem "
And did those feet in ancient time", "Jerusalem", Songs of Farewell is seen as representing a decline in national confidence.[2][3] During the war, Parry lost many of his students,
George Butterworth was killed,
Arthur Bliss wounded and
Ivor Gurney was gassed. Having been a lifelong Germanophile, who previously believed that Britain would never go to war with the Kaiser, the war proved to be a time of personal despair for Parry, which is reflected in the six pieces.[4]
Performance
The first concert performance of Songs of Farewell took place at the Royal College of Music on 22 May 1916, when
The Bach Choir sang the first five pieces, directed by
Hugh Allen. Parry's piece was well received by critics; reviews in The Daily Telegraph and The Musical Times praised the pieces, and a review in The Times said that the fifth song, ""At the round earth's imagined corners", was "one of the most impressive short choral works written in recent years".[5]
Parry died on 7 October 1918 and one of the pieces from Songs of Farewell, "There is an old belief", was sung at the composer's funeral in
St Paul's Cathedral.[6] The first performance of the complete set of six songs was at a memorial service to Parry held in the chapel of
Exeter College, Oxford on 23 February 1919, four months after his death.[1]
Songs from the Songs of Farewell are now part of the repertoire of
Anglican church music and are often sung as anthems at services in churches and cathedrals.[7]