HUTTER Secular Choral Music
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Gregory Hutter
Genre:
Vocal
Label: Naxos
Magazine Review Date: AW2019
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 49
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 8 559868
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Shed No Tear! |
Gregory Hutter, Composer
Gregory Hutter, Composer Philovox Ensemble Robert Schuneman, Conductor |
Ah! Woe is Me! |
Gregory Hutter, Composer
Gregory Hutter, Composer Philovox Ensemble Robert Schuneman, Conductor |
A Farewell |
Gregory Hutter, Composer
Gregory Hutter, Composer Philovox Ensemble Robert Schuneman, Conductor |
Tears, Idle Tears |
Gregory Hutter, Composer
Gregory Hutter, Composer Philovox Ensemble Robert Schuneman, Conductor |
A Cradle Song |
Gregory Hutter, Composer
Gregory Hutter, Composer Philovox Ensemble Robert Schuneman, Conductor |
Winter Song |
Gregory Hutter, Composer
Gregory Hutter, Composer Philovox Ensemble Robert Schuneman, Conductor |
Blow, Blow, Thou Winter Wind |
Gregory Hutter, Composer
Gregory Hutter, Composer Philovox Ensemble |
Three American Madrigals |
Gregory Hutter, Composer
Composers' Choir Daniel Shaw, Conductor Gregory Hutter, Composer |
Under the Harvest Moon |
Gregory Hutter, Composer
Gregory Hutter, Composer Matthew Culloton, Conductor The Singers - Minnesota Choral Artists |
Tears |
Gregory Hutter, Composer
Gregory Hutter, Composer Shannon Seay |
Author: Laurence Vittes
Throughout, Hutter’s supernally beautiful writing for inner voices illuminates texts with his measured pacing, rhythms and cautious close harmonies, the poetry in the words and then the music. He moves not metrically but in dialogue; and he clearly adores the poetry he’s setting, combining a cowboy’s wounded heart with an eternal trust in love. He can be totally Currier and Ives, as in his use of bells in Wilfred Owen’s sweet ‘Winter Song’. His ‘Blow, blow, thou winter wind’ starts like a happy ‘Erlkönig’, raising thoughts of Schubert setting Shakespeare in English.
But his deepest interests here reveal themselves in moments of personal experience. The identification he and the singers have with the hidden dimensions of Sara Teasdale’s ‘I love you’ (last of the Three American Madrigals) makes you feel they’ve all been there before, one time or another. His transforming treatment of Carl Sandburg’s ‘Under the Harvest Moon’ is erotically charged.
With keen theatrical timing, Hutter offers two settings of Walt Whitman’s ‘Tears’. The first (also from the Three American Madrigals), for chorus, has a searing sadness, like Patsy Cline singing ‘Crazy’. The second, rescored for four female singers and sung by a multitracked Shannon Seay, has a remote, ethereal quality that’s just right for the last track on the CD.
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