Poetry in Music
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Michael East, (Charles) Edmund Rubbra, Robert Lucas Pearsall, Benjamin Britten, Thomas Weelkes, William Harris, Michael Tippett, Thomas Tomkins, Herbert Howells, Robert Ramsey, Ivor (Bertie) Gurney, James MacMillan
Genre:
Vocal
Label: Coro
Magazine Review Date: 11/2015
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 71
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: COR16134
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Faire is the heaven |
William Harris, Composer
(The) Sixteen Harry Christophers, Conductor William Harris, Composer |
Dance, Clarion Air |
Michael Tippett, Composer
(The) Sixteen Harry Christophers, Conductor Michael Tippett, Composer |
When David heard |
Thomas Weelkes, Composer
(The) Sixteen Harry Christophers, Conductor Thomas Weelkes, Composer |
(The) Gallant Weaver |
James MacMillan, Composer
(The) Sixteen Harry Christophers, Conductor James MacMillan, Composer |
Since I believe in God the Father Almighty |
Ivor (Bertie) Gurney, Composer
(The) Sixteen Harry Christophers, Conductor Ivor (Bertie) Gurney, Composer |
Hymn to St Cecilia |
Benjamin Britten, Composer
(The) Sixteen Benjamin Britten, Composer Harry Christophers, Conductor |
There is a spirit |
(Charles) Edmund Rubbra, Composer
(Charles) Edmund Rubbra, Composer (The) Sixteen Harry Christophers, Conductor |
When David heard that Absalon was slain |
Michael East, Composer
(The) Sixteen Harry Christophers, Conductor Michael East, Composer |
Take him, earth, for cherishing |
Herbert Howells, Composer
(The) Sixteen Harry Christophers, Conductor Herbert Howells, Composer |
Lay a garland on her hearse |
Robert Lucas Pearsall, Composer
(The) Sixteen Harry Christophers, Conductor Robert Lucas Pearsall, Composer |
Eternite |
(Charles) Edmund Rubbra, Composer
(Charles) Edmund Rubbra, Composer (The) Sixteen Harry Christophers, Conductor |
Bring us, O Lord God |
William Harris, Composer
(The) Sixteen Harry Christophers, Conductor William Harris, Composer |
Author: Marc Rochester
That specialness comes not just from the fact that The Sixteen elevate everything they perform through their opulent musicality and supreme clarity of tone, but from Harry Christophers’s intuitive grasp of the marriage of music and words in all 14 of these powerfully perceptive musical responses to beautifully crafted English texts. Many of these anthems will be familiar to those with a grounding in the great Anglican choral tradition, but none sounds familiar here. Rather, these performances reveal a depth of expression and artistic intensity in music we thought we knew but now realise we only partially comprehended. These performances are, in every sense of the word, revelatory.
Of the less familiar items, Ivor Gurney’s setting of Robert Bridge’s reimagining of the Creed, Since I believe in God, is a deeply intense work, written while the composer was incarcerated in a mental hospital in Dartford (a doubly grim location for such a sublime creation), while Rubbra’s free-flowing There is a spirit provides a lovely vehicle for the exquisite soprano of Julie Cooper. It is also good to be reminded that Robert Pearsall contributed far more to the repertory of English choirs than his famous version of In dulci jubilo, echoes of which are, however, never far from the surface in The Sixteen’s warmly expressive account of Lay a Garland.
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