Sleeper's Prayer: Choral Music from North America

Record and Artist Details

Genre:

Vocal

Label: Delphian

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 64

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: DCD34232

DCD34232. Sleeper's Prayer: Choral Music from North America

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Senex puerum portabat Nico Muhly, Composer
Benjamin Nicholas, Conductor
Choir of Merton College, Oxford
Merton Brass
Again David Lang, Composer
Benjamin Nicholas, Conductor
Choir of Merton College, Oxford
The Rev'd Mustard His Installation Prelude Nico Muhly, Composer
Alex Little, Organ
If I Sing (After Psalm 101) David Lang, Composer
Benjamin Nicholas, Conductor
Choir of Merton College, Oxford
A Hymn on the Nativity Nico Muhly, Composer
Benjamin Nicholas, Conductor
Choir of Merton College, Oxford
Thomas Fetherstonhaugh, Organ
Hudson Preludes, Movement: Take Care Nico Muhly, Composer
Thomas Fetherstonhaugh, Organ
I will sing and raise a psalm Libby Larsen, Composer
Alex Little, Organ
Benjamin Nicholas, Conductor
Choir of Merton College, Oxford
A Song of Ephrem the Syrian Nico Muhly, Composer
Benjamin Nicholas, Conductor
Choir of Merton College, Oxford
Choristers of Merton College, Oxford
Sleeper's Prayer David Lang, Composer
Benjamin Nicholas, Conductor
Choir of Merton College, Oxford
Thomas Fetherstonhaugh, Organ
Satyagraha, Movement: Conclusion, Act 3 Philip Glass, Composer
Benjamin Nicholas, Organ
Cedit, hyems Abbie Betinis, Composer
Benjamin Nicholas, Conductor
Choir of Merton College, Oxford
Claire Wickes, Flute
Deep River Traditional, Composer
Benjamin Nicholas, Conductor
Choir of Merton College, Oxford
(The) Road Home Stephen Paulus, Composer
Benjamin Nicholas, Conductor
Choir of Merton College, Oxford

Whether or not you like the typical American choral sound, there’s no denying that it was made both by and for the music of America’s contemporary composers. You can hear Randall Thompson, Lauridsen, Whitacre in its soft-focus blend and thicker textures, and it’s a rare British choir that doesn’t feel just a bit too thin, too precise, too correct delivering it.

Which makes this latest release from the Choir of Merton College, Oxford – a collection of modern American choral works – an interesting one. Music director Benjamin Nicholas has been canny in his choices, steering away from the lusher end of the repertoire towards the leaner, more Anglican sound world of Nico Muhly and David Lang’s angular minimalism.

Merton’s relationship with Delphian extends back nearly a decade, and you can hear the changes under Nicholas’s careful direction – in the softer-edged blend, the more bass-anchored sound. Both of which come in handy here, fostering the glow that suffuses Muhly’s Senex puerum portabat as well as the rapturous close of Muhly’s A Song of Ephrem the Syrian (‘A wonder set apart yet received by our lips’) and the all-important coda of Lang’s Psalm 101 paraphrase if I sing, with its belated consolation and blessing.

There are a lot of arpeggios here, and the collection (which includes a generous handful of premieres) is at its best when it varies the pace. Abbie Betinis’s Cedit, hyems shouts its difference in ear-catching textures and motifs; a haunting solo flute and icy chatter warm gradually into a pulsing dance, as winter gives way to spring. Muhly’s enticingly titled organ toccata Rev’d Mustard His Installation Prelude adds some playfulness, while his setting of Ben Johnson’s A Hymn on the Nativity takes us away from ostinato and into more rhetorical, responsive word-setting.

Only in the encore-like final track, the modern classic that is Stephen Paulus’s The Road Home, do we miss the full-fat tones of a Conspirare or similar. Suddenly Merton’s bright, youthful sopranos, so agile elsewhere, lack the control and heft for this uncompromising, affirmative simplicity.

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