Angele Dei: New Latvian Choral Music

Record and Artist Details

Genre:

Vocal

Label: LMIC/SKANI

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 71

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: LMIC163

LMIC163. Angele Dei: New Latvian Choral Music

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Sensus Krists Auznieks, Composer
Kaspars Putnins, Conductor
Latvian Radio Choir
Sigvards Klava, Conductor
Om, Lux aeterna Andris Dzenītis, Composer
Kaspars Putnins, Conductor
Latvian Radio Choir
Sigvards Klava, Conductor
Prayer Andris Dzenītis, Composer
Kaspars Putnins, Conductor
Latvian Radio Choir
Sigvards Klava, Conductor
Magnificat Ruta Paidere, Composer
Kaspars Putnins, Conductor
Latvian Radio Choir
Sigvards Klava, Conductor
Nighttime Santa Ratniece, Composer
Kaspars Putnins, Conductor
Latvian Radio Choir
Sigvards Klava, Conductor
Actus caritatis Peteris Vasks, Composer
Kaspars Putnins, Conductor
Latvian Radio Choir
Sigvards Klava, Conductor
Angele Dei Peteris Vasks, Composer
Kaspars Putnins, Conductor
Latvian Radio Choir
Sigvards Klava, Conductor
The Fate of King Lear’s Children Martins Viļums, Composer
Kaspars Putnins, Conductor
Latvian Radio Choir
Sigvards Klava, Conductor

With six composers and the Latvian Radio Choir, Skani offers us a ‘time stamp’ of the state of new Latvian choral music in 2023. The miracle – beyond the choir’s combination of technical expertise and human soul – is that we hear once again from composers with contrasting experiences, outlooks and technical habits who nonetheless so often manage to sound wholly Latvian.

There are a few things in play there – one of them the influential sound of the Latvian Radio Choir, bringing its hint of Orthodox depth and mysticism to the best of the Baltic Sea’s clean-lined professional chamber choir scene. Latvia’s regard for its own heritage as a singing nation and a deeply religious one is there, too: seven of the eight tracks here use sacred Latin texts. But there is little sense of tradition doing anything other than springing the compositional imagination forwards – even when, as in the title and opening track, Vasks’s Angele Dei, the texture is homophonic, the lines long and lyrical, and the quest, apparently, one for beauty (there are plenty of extended techniques elsewhere). For Vasks, the discovery of that beauty is never gratuitous. This piece and Actus caritatis underline the distinctive sound of the choir as much as reminding you how straightforwardly moving Vasks manages to be, even at his simplest.

The smaller the country, the easier it is to cultivate a national aesthetic incorporating plenteous variation. Krists Auznieks’s Sensus puts 24 voice parts in service of a fragment of St Paul’s Letter to the Romans with a sort of spectral spiritualism. Like many of his compatriots, Auznieks can suspend a cloud of voices in the air but this is fundamentally a piece whose revelations are harmonic. Two pieces by Andris Dzenītis are perhaps the most unmistakably Latvian of all. Om, Lux aeterna weaves pitch-bending voices from the bottom up into an extraordinary, dense, vibratory mass of sound that dissipates. Prayer is a homophonic hymn: bottom-heavy (again), anthemic, smouldering through its chant-like incantations.

Ruta Paidere’s setting of the Magnificat uses elements of Buddhist and Jewish chant and samples of Palestrina’s own setting, which can bring the feeling of a collage. Partnering it here is Santa Ratniece’s Nighttime Light, which sets the Nunc dimittis, the most technically radical piece on the album but one that still mines that fertile Latvian seam of pained lyricism and settles into a thick-set harmonic chassis to support the final melismatic ‘lumen Domine’. Mārtiņš Viļums’s The Fate of King Lear’s Children (not after Shakespeare but assembling texts from various sagas and legends) has a theatricality not present in other works here, voices apparently dismembered as they pursue the contrasting polyphonic agendas of the composer’s signature ‘microsonorism’ but with no sense of ill-discipline in the writing or the execution. It only proves how every single singer deserves their place in this remarkable and highly distinctive ensemble.

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