Tag: Haydn Wood

  • Haydn Wood’s Enduring Melody

    Haydn Wood was born on this date in 1882. Although his name is pronounced “Hayden,” his parents, both musicians, indeed named him for Franz Joseph Haydn. Wood composed larger works for the concert hall, including concertos for piano and violin, and there was once a symphony, now lost, but his reputation rests on his light music and songs. He composed over 200 ballads.

    This was one of his biggest hits, one of the great tear-jerkers of the First World War. Wood was riding atop a double-decker bus when the melody came to him. He hopped off and jotted it down onto an envelope by lamplight. The text was added by Frederick Weatherly.

    During the war, the song sold 50,000 copies of sheet music. Its singing was used in the rehabilitation of shell-shocked soldiers, who had lost the ability to speak. It was recorded many, many times.

    These days, it’s often employed to add flavor to period dramas. Of the earliest recordings, John McCormack’s rendition was notably popular.

    Happy birthday, Haydn Wood!

  • Haydn Wood’s Joyful May Day Overture

    Haydn Wood’s Joyful May Day Overture

    “A May Day Overture” by Haydn Wood

  • British Light Music A Sweet Morning on WPRB

    British Light Music A Sweet Morning on WPRB

    Drowse by a sleepy lagoon with Eric Coates. Luxuriate to bells across the meadows with Albert Ketèlbey. Cherish the roses of Picardy with Haydn Wood.

    We’ll attempt to lighten your load this morning on WPRB with a program of unpretentious, unapologetically melodic music, drawn from the genre known as British Light Music. Living relics of a bygone era, British Light Music enjoyed its heyday in the age of palm court orchestras and during the formative years of radio. Its antecedents reach back to sentimental music of the 19th century and works like those of Sir Arthur Sullivan and Edward German, and its influence continues to make itself felt in the lighter music of John Rutter and Philip Lane.

    To allow me to catch my breath and actually enter the playlist online (at wprb.com), we’ll also hear a symphony by Robert Farnon, a piano concerto by Haydn Wood, and a cello concerto by Sir Arthur Sullivan, lost in a fire in 1964, but resurrected through a remarkable feat of memory by conductor Sir Charles Mackerras.

    This kind of music may not be for everyone, but it’s definitely for me. It will make for a very sugary breakfast, that’s for certain, this Thursday morning from 6 to 11 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. Trip the light fantastic, on Classic Ross Amico.

  • May Day Music & Merrymaking for Spring

    May Day Music & Merrymaking for Spring

    Now is the Month of Maying…

    Here’s “A May Day Overture” by Haydn Wood:

    And Howard Hanson’s Borodin-esque “Maypole Dances,” from the opera “Merry Mount”:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sumPqSm1oRo

    With a toast to Merrymount’s Thomas Morton:
    https://almostchosenpeople.wordpress.com/2011/05/01/thomas-morton-of-merrymount/

    And a belt for Beltane:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beltane

    Happy May Day!

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