Traces

Record and Artist Details

Genre:

Vocal

Label: Platoon

Media Format: Download

Media Runtime: 68

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: PLAT16731

PLAT16731. Traces

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Psalm 126 Paul Ben-Haim, Composer
Sansara
Tom Herring, Conductor
(2) Motets, Movement: Warum ist das Licht gegeben (Wds. Bible: trans Lut Johannes Brahms, Composer
Sansara
Tom Herring, Conductor
Requiem aeternam (Carl August) Peter Cornelius, Composer
Sansara
Tom Herring, Conductor
Blessed are the Peacemakers Piers Kennedy, Composer
Sansara
Tom Herring, Conductor
Standing as I do before God Cecilia McDowall, Composer
Sansara
Tom Herring, Conductor
Herr, lehre doch mich Rudolf Mauersberger, Composer
Sansara
Tom Herring, Conductor
(3) Prayers of Dietrich Bonhoeffer Philip Moore, Composer
Sansara
Tom Herring, Conductor
(8) Geistliche Gesänge, Movement: Nachtlied (Johann Baptist Joseph) Max(imilian) Reger, Composer
Sansara
Tom Herring, Conductor
Abendfeier in Venedig Clara (Josephine) Schumann, Composer
Sansara
Tom Herring, Conductor
Selig sind die Toten Heinrich Schütz, Composer
Sansara
Tom Herring, Conductor
Komm, süsser Tod Ethel (Mary) Smyth, Composer
Sansara
Tom Herring, Conductor
A Quiet Night Natalia Tsupryk, Composer
Sansara
Tom Herring, Conductor

In an era of chunk able, bitesize, hyperlinked, free-associative streaming, it’s lovely to come across a proper recital. The individual tracks on ‘Traces’ – the fifth album from London-based Sansara and their founder-director Tom Herring – are impeccable: these are top-notch choral performances. But that sort of goes without saying in today’s over-abundant British choral market.

What sets it apart are not only some unusual repertoire choices but also the dialogues, musical, textual and thematic, that run through it. This isn’t just another ‘pieces we like about night’ job. Ethel Smyth’s unexpectedly knotty Komm, süsser Tod – a piece that we should definitely be hearing more of – grows directly out of Brahms’s ‘Warum ist das licht gegeben?’, a musical chain of influence and evolution experienced in real time. A central sequence of contemporary works offers a chance for the ear to reset and refresh between the two framing panels of German Romantics and their heirs. The programme’s origins are in an Oxford University research initiative focused on the White Rose resistance movement of the Second World War: five students and a professor at the University of Munich who opposed the Nazi regime, and were executed as a result.

While German and British repertoire dominates, the programme embodies resistance in broader ways. Connections are drawn with anti-Semitism, for example, in a stonking premiere recording of German-born Israeli composer Paul Ben Haim’s Psalm 126 – an ambitious setting for eight-part male voices full of extravagant effects (though it’s hard to get a feel for the composer’s signature among so much variety). And the central theme is brought keenly up to date in Ukrainian composer Natalia Tsupryk’s poignant A Quiet Night. Commissioned by Sansara in 2022, it’s a piece of understated endurance. Pedal points hold us suspended, while liturgical-style chant looks back and forwards through time.

It’s lovely to see British composer Philip Moore enjoying some attention across various releases currently. Here we get his typically distilled Three Prayers of Dietrich Bonhoeffer: three movements that paint prayer in its many moods, from anguished distress to quiet certainty. There’s no spare flesh on the elegant musical bones, which seem to glow under such careful choral handling.

These are beautifully shaped accounts, a finely calibrated balance of tonal soft and hard, melt and attack.

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