Here’s something I didn’t know until today when I was driving home: English composer Frederick Delius lived for a time in Florida in the 1880s, during which he managed a local orange grove while he studied with a noted organist in Jacksonville. From this stay arose one of Delius’s most popular works, The Florida Suite. We’re only concerning ourselves with one movement from the suite, because our focus in this series right now is music inspired by water.
The orange grove Delius managed was on the St. Johns River, which is the longest river in Florida, running over 300 miles from headwaters south of Orlando to its mouth near Jacksonville. The river runs parallel to the seacoast, and it’s actually a fascinating river to track on Google Earth, as it winds back and forth and into and out of large lakes along its path.
Since the St. Johns doesn’t have much elevation drop at all, its flow is generally slow and sometimes even ebbs with the shifting of the tides. Thus Delius’s work, which paints a tone picture of life along a slowly moving waterway. There is little drama here, just the slow life spent along a slow river.
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