Christina Rossetti In Music

Christina Rossetti in Music Project

"Too late for love" [Samuel Coleridge-Taylor]

Title

"Too late for love" [Samuel Coleridge-Taylor]
First line of lyrics: Too late for love, too late for joy,
Part of: "Six Sorrow Songs"

Creator

Coleridge-Taylor, Samuel; music (English, 1875-1912)
Rossetti, Christina Georgina; text (English, 1830-1894)

Date

1904 [publication] [copyright]; 1906 [copyright]

Publisher

London: Augener Ltd.; Paris: Max Eschig; Boston: Boston Music Co.

Subject

genre: art song (lied)|song cycle|song
solo: low voice
instrumentation: piano
initial sharps/flats: four flats
initial time signature: 4/4
other version 1 - solo: high voice
other version 1 - instrumentation: piano
other version 1 - initial sharps/flats: two flats
origin: United Kingdom
male composer

Language

English

Description

Rossetti poem(s): "The Prince's Progress"
Place in the larger work: The sixth song of six in the song cycle called "6 Sorrow Songs," settings of Christina Rossetti poems, which includes 1. "Oh what comes over the Sea"; 2. "When I am dead, my dearest"; 3. "Oh, Roses for the flush of youth"; 4. "She sat and sang alway"; 5. "Unmindful of the Roses"; 6. "Too late for love"
Notes about the text: Setting of the lines beginning with "Too late for love, too late for you" from the poem "The Prince's Progress."
Composition history: "By permission of Messrs. Macmillan & Co."
Tempo markings: "Andante."
Performance history: Debut performance of the song cycle: "1904/V/18; Croydon; Public Hall; Marie Brema, mezzo-soprano" (de Lerma). Performance of the song cycle streamed live on Sep 23, 2020 in a concert at Wigmore Hall, London, with Elizabeth Llewellyn, soprano and Simon Lepper, piano, YouTube, https://youtu.be/KuoYQydNjG4. Accessed 29 Sep. 2020.
Dedication: "To My Wife" [Jessie Coleridge-Taylor]
Notes: The song cycle was arranged with string quartet accompaniment by Cedric Sharpe (British, 1891-1978). (Gooch and Thatcher 4689) Also arranged for "for medium voice & piano." (de Lerma)

Format

Format 1: musical score
6 pages (pp. 18-23)

Source

In reference to the published works below: Gooch and Thatcher 4689
Reference: Gooch, Bryan N.S. and David S. Thatcher. Musical Settings of Early and Mid-Victorian Literature: A Catalogue. New York: Garland, 1979.
Reference: IMSLP Petrucci Music Library, http://imslp.org/
Reference: Ezust, Emily. The LiederNet Archive. http://www.lieder.net/lieder/index.html
Other data reference(s): de Lerma, Dominique-René. 46. Works. "Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912)." AfriClassical.com, African Heritage in Classical Music, http://chevalierdesaintgeorges.homestead.com/song.html#46. Accessed 6 Dec. 2018.
Cataloguer: Roxanne Lafleur, University of Ottawa
musical score for low voice: University of Victoria Library, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
musical score for high voice: IMSLP Petrucci Music Library, https://imslp.org/wiki/Special:ReverseLookup/23607. Accessed 2 Oct. 2018.

Identifier

Opus: 57, number 6
Record: CRM-princesprogress-coleridge-taylor
File(s): CRM-princesprogress-coleridge-taylor-low.pdf; CRM-princesprogress-coleridge-taylor-high.pdf

Rights

musical score for low voice: "Copyright 1904, by Augener & Co."
musical score for high voice: "Copyright 1906, by Augener & Co."
The Christina Rossetti in Music project website is hosted in Canada at the University of Ottawa Library, and we aim to comply with Canadian copyright laws. If you believe we have violated Canadian copyright law, please contact us at christinarossettimusic@uottawa.ca. The Christina Rossetti in Music project is strictly not for profit and intended for research and educational purposes only.

Files

Collection

Citation

Coleridge-Taylor, Samuel; music (English, 1875-1912) and Rossetti, Christina Georgina; text (English, 1830-1894), “"Too late for love" [Samuel Coleridge-Taylor],” Christina Rossetti In Music, accessed September 19, 2024, http://omeka.uottawa.ca/christinarossettiinmusic/items/show/1878.

Item Relations

Item: "Oh what comes over the Sea" [Samuel Coleridge-Taylor] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item
Item: "When I am dead, my dearest" [Samuel Coleridge-Taylor] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item
Item: "Oh, Roses for the flush of youth" [Samuel Coleridge-Taylor] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item
Item: "She sat and sang alway" [Samuel Coleridge-Taylor] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item
Item: "Unmindful of the Roses" [Samuel Coleridge-Taylor] is part of a larger work that also includes This Item