I know where I'm going - John Rutter, Cambridge Singers, City of London Sinfonia
‘I know where I'm going' from 'The Sprig of Thyme' by John Rutter.
7. I know where I'm going
Irish Traditional Song - from ‘The Sprig of Thyme’
Arranger John Rutter
Conductor John Rutter
Choir The Cambridge Singers
Orchestra Members of the City of London Sinfonia
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LYRICS:
I know where I’m going,
And I know who’s going with me,
I know who I love
But the dear knows who I’ll marry!
I have stockings of silk,
Shoes of fine green leather,
Combs to buckle my hair,
And a ring for every finger.
Some say he’s black*,
But I say he’s bonny,
The fairest of them all
My handsome, winsome Johnny.
Feather beds are soft,
And painted rooms are bonny,
But I would leave them all
To go with my love Johnny.
I know where I’m going,
And 1 know who’s going with me,
I know who I love
But the dear knows who I’ll marry!
*black: dour, ungracious
The Sprig of Thyme
The Sprig of Thyme offers a selection of traditional songs of the British Isles, drawing together long-standing favourites as Willow Song and The Miller of Dee with lesser known gems as O Can Ye Sew Cushions and The Sprig of Thyme. Many new settings for choir and small instrumental group have been created by John Rutter especially for this album. Rutter’s suite of eleven traditional songs, The Sprig of Thyme (all of which can be heard on this album) is published by Oxford University Press.
‘This is a lovely disc; one to head my list of Christmas presents for musical friends…’ Gramophone
“This superb collection of traditional English songs, arranged by R. Vaughan Williams and John Rutter, is drawn from nursery rhymes, scout camps, and hymns from High Church assemblies. Sung in the peerless tones of The Cambridge Singers, these humble songs echo the gentility and cultural nationalism of postwar England. Included are bold drinking songs, tender lullabies, and love songs of fragile beauty. They bring delight and pleasure from a vanished age.” AllMusic
John Rutter, English composer and conductor, is associated with choral music throughout the world. His recordings with the Cambridge Singers (the professional chamber choir he set up in 1983) have reached a wide global audience, many of them featuring his own music in definitive versions. Among John’s best-known choral works are Gloria, Requiem, Magnificat, Mass of the Children, and Visions, together with many church anthems, choral songs and Christmas carols.
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