DCD34359-CD

Day of These Days: The British Isles Reflected in Song

‘Such a morning it is,’ wrote Laurie Lee – and this album, taking its title from his poem, is rooted in such particular moments of lived experience, capturing that fleeting, introspective British light. Bass-baritone Tristan Hambleton and pianist Simon Lepper create a landscape of songs by Britten, Sally Beamish, Judith Weir, Huw Watkins, Tarik O’Regan, Errollyn Wallen and others, many in first recordings, drawn together by themes of time, loss and uncertain footing. Recorded with a close, inward focus, voice and piano search not for display but for connection – a meditation on being, and on what it means, in Robert Louis Stevenson’s words, ‘to know not how it is with you’.

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'Hambleton's clarity of tone is a consistent pleasure throughout. Britten's This Way to the Tomb is particularly striking, Lepper's accompaniment percussive and alive to Hambleton's phrasing. Richard Sisson's The Silver Swan is a delight, and Stuart Macrae's I Know Not How It Is with You sits at the album's emotional heart. In Huw Watkins's contributions we hear the full expressive range of Hambleton's voice, while Sally Beamish's Day of These Days — brief but telling — captures Laurie Lee's words with quiet precision, Hambleton's lower register particularly effective. The album's most elegant moment may be Thomas Adès's arrangement of Purcell's By Beauteous Softness, sung with real poise.

Delphian's recording team have done their customary excellent work, the sound beautifully suited to the intimate nature of the material'

Read the full review here.

'There is a dark tone to lots of the songs – the booklet explains that several were transposed lower to fit Tristan Hambleton’s range – and this has implications for the tessitura of the piano too. Britten is always unimpeachable, and his short sequence This Way to the Tomb, written during the composition of Peter Grimes, is a perfect opener, crisp but always teetering on the brink of melancholy. Sally Beamish’s song gives the album its name, has an admirable pared-back simplicity, as is Judith Weir’s more declamatory setting of Shakespeare’s Sonnet 116. Thomas Adès’s arrangement of Purcell’s By beauteous softness is both beauteous and soft, while Tarik O’Regan’s settings of Andrew Motion are more troubled, both in the hesitant vocals and peripatetic piano parts. Huw Watkins’ three songs look up to the moon and explore some of the higher reaches of Hambleton’s register, while Stuart MacRae’s "I know not how it is with you" is a little gem, tentative and aching.'

Release date: 20 March 2026
Recorded on 27-29 January 2025 at St Cuthbert's Church Edinburgh
Producer/Engineer: Paul Baxter
24-bit digital editing: Jack Davis
24-bit digital mastering: Paul Baxter
Design: John Christ
Booklet editor: Henry Howard
Session photography: Will Coates-Gibson/ Foxbrush

Album Booklet

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