Canticle III: Still falls the rain
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Canticle III: Still falls the rain is a piece by English composer Benjamin Britten.
[edit] Composition and premiere
Britten composed Canticle III, Still falls the rain: The raids 1940. Night and dawn (Op.55), to give it its full title, in 1954 for a memorial concert for the pianist Noel Mewton-Wood. The concert was given at Wigmore Hall in January 1955. Canticle III was premiered by Peter Pears (Tenor), Dennis Brain (French horn) and the composer on piano.
[edit] Source poem
The poem on which Canticle III is based is by Edith Sitwell and was first published in 1941. It was written after the raids on London in 1940. The poem is dark, full of the disillusions of World War II. It speaks of the failure of man, and of the yet unconditional love of God.
[edit] Music
The structure of the piece is similar to the one of the opera The Turn of the Screw which was premiered a few months before Canticle III. This structure is characterized by the alternation of instrumental interludes (here the horn and piano) and text settings. The text is presented in a free recitative style with very little interventions of the piano, which emphasizes the poetry itself. The horn and tenor unite only at the very end, on a rhythmic unison, when the poem evocates the voice of God. A similar coloristic effect (rhythmic unison of the tenor and the alto) had been used in Canticle II, Abraham and Isaac to represent the voice of God talking to Abraham.