The Florida Suite is an orchestral suite by English composer Frederick Delius. He composed the work in 1887 at Leipzig, after his time as manager of an orange grove in Florida, inspired by its landscape and culture, mainly centred on the St. Johns River. During this time, Delius also studied music with an organist in Jacksonville.[1] This suite is one of the composer's more popular works. The "Daybreak" movement includes a version of the tune "La Calinda", which Delius later used in his opera Koanga.[2]
Hans Sitt led the first performance of the work in 1888 in Leipzig.[3] Sir Thomas Beecham was a noted champion and had a copyist's score, which he used for himself, made from the composer's original manuscript. The suite was first published in 1963. A corrected edition of the score was published in 1986.[4]
It is an example of the type of programme music for which Delius was both lauded and disparaged.[5]
Movements
The suite consists of four movements:
Daybreak — Dance
By the River
Sunset — Near the Plantation
At Night
References
^Kohen, Helen L. (1998). "Perfume, Postcards, and Promises: The Orange in Art and Industry". The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts. 23: 33–47. doi:10.2307/1504162. JSTOR1504162.
^Hollinrake, Roger (January–April 1993). "Reviews of Books: A Distant Music: The Life and Times of Alfred Hill 1870-1960 by John Mansfield Thomson". Music & Letters. 64 (1/2): 69–70. doi:10.1093/ml/64.1-2.69. JSTOR735364.
^Banfield, Stephen (April 1988). "Review of Florida: Suite for Orchestra, Op. posth. (new edition)". Music & Letters. 69 (2): 307. doi:10.1093/ml/69.2.307. JSTOR855258.
^A Village Romeo and Juliet (theatre programme). Opera North. 6 June 1984.