LEIGHTON; MARTIN Masses for Double Choir
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Frank Martin, Kenneth Leighton, Jehan Alain
Genre:
Vocal
Label: Delphian
Magazine Review Date: 05/2019
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 64
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: DCD34211
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Mass |
Kenneth Leighton, Composer
Caitlin Goreing, Alto James Orford, Organ Joseph Edwards, Bass Joseph Fort, Conductor Kenneth Leighton, Composer London King's College Choir Mimi Doulton, Soprano William Hester, Tenor |
Mass for Double Choir |
Frank Martin, Composer
Frank Martin, Composer Joseph Fort, Conductor London King's College Choir |
Postlude pour l'office des Complies |
Jehan Alain, Composer
James Orford, Organ Jehan Alain, Composer |
Author: Marc Rochester
Those Leighton isms – driving, impulsive rhythms, highly energised chromaticisms, intensity built up through frequent repetitions of small musical cells, and that sense of continually building up polyphonic lines to some ecstatic climax – are fervently delivered by the gloriously robust King’s College London choir. Joseph Fort is clearly very much in his element with this music and drives his singers onwards with an almost hypnotic zeal.
There are two substantial points of departure between these two Mass settings. First, Leighton calls for a quartet of soloists. Mimi Doulton is the first to show herself in a powerful, forthright setting of the Gloria, and while the other three – Caitlin Goreing, William Hester and Joseph Edwards – easily match her full-throated presence, their very forward placing in the sound stage can seem a little overwhelming.
The second difference comes with the Credo, where Leighton added an organ part in an otherwise unaccompanied work. Played here by James Orford on the organ of the church of St John the Evangelist, Upper Norwood, London, this creates an appropriately rugged foundation for this fundamental expression of Christian faith. But quite why Leighton did this remains something of a mystery; as does the decision to close the disc with a highly atmospheric, plainchant infused organ piece by Jehan Alain originally intended to conclude not a Mass setting but the late-evening office of the church.
Magnificent as the Leighton work is, it does not really hold a candle to the Martin Mass, which remains, for me, one of the truly great choral works, the finest a cappella setting of the Mass of the 20th century. Similarly, despite their outstanding performance of the Leighton, there is a real sense of involvement about the choir’s singing in the Martin which is in an altogether different league. True, there are rough edges and a few coarse moments here (notably in the ‘Christe eleison’), but, above all, this is a performance of astonishing intensity and musicality. A powerfully moving interpretation of a powerfully moving work.
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