FREE UK SHIPPING OVER £30!

Advent Live Vol.3

The Europadisc Review

Advent Live Vol.3

Andrew Nethsingha, George Herbert, Choir of St John’s College Cambridge, James Ande...

£9.52

Since 2016 the Choir of St John’s College, Cambridge, under its recently departed Director of Music Andrew Nethsingha, has treated listeners to a splendid series of recordings on its own imprint, part of the Signum Classics group. Two series of discs – ‘Magnificat’ and ‘Advent Live’ – have been particularly impressive, and when it came to choosing our annual Christmas recommendation for 2023, Volume 3 of ‘Advent Live’ quickly became an obvious choice. It documents services across three years, from 2020 to 2022: 2020 was performed and broadcast ‘live’ but without a congregation present, coming ... read more

Since 2016 the Choir of St John’s College, Cambridge, under its recently departed Director of Music Andrew Nethsingha, has treated listeners to a splendid series of recordings on its own imprint, part of the Signum Classics group. Two series of discs... read more

Advent Live Vol.3

Advent Live Vol.3

Andrew Nethsingha, George Herbert, Choir of St John’s College Cambridge, James Anderson-Besant (organ), Oliver Wass (harp), Joseph Wicks (organ), George Herbert (organ)

Since 2016 the Choir of St John’s College, Cambridge, under its recently departed Director of Music Andrew Nethsingha, has treated listeners to a splendid series of recordings on its own imprint, part of the Signum Classics group. Two series of discs – ‘Magnificat’ and ‘Advent Live’ – have been particularly impressive, and when it came to choosing our annual Christmas recommendation for 2023, Volume 3 of ‘Advent Live’ quickly became an obvious choice. It documents services across three years, from 2020 to 2022: 2020 was performed and broadcast ‘live’ but without a congregation present, coming amid a Covid lockdown. In 2021 several choristers had to isolate and Nethsingha himself was incapacitated by Covid: the service was sung by a reduced choir under the direction of the Senior Organ Scholar, George Herbert. 2022 turned out to be Nethsingha’s last at St John’s before he took up another prestigious post, as Organist and Master of the Choristers at Westminster Abbey (where he was instantly thrust into the limelight with King Charles’s Coronation). It was also the first year in which the choir included girl choristers.

Given the testing circumstances under which some of these recordings took place, it’s a marvel that there’s such consistency across the disc as a whole, which broadly traces a journey from John the Baptist’s cries amid the desert landscape to jubilant shepherds proclaiming the birth of Christ. Three elements provide punctuating ‘pillars’ to the programme: Advent hymns including the traditional ‘O come, O come, Emmanuel’ and culminating in the thrilling ‘On Jordan’s bank the Baptist’s cry’; three Advent antiphons sung to traditional plainchant; and four chorale preludes by J.S. Bach (including the ever-popular ‘Wachet auf’), all stylishly played in 2022 by George Herbert.

The meat of the disc, however, is provided by the wide selection of original settings of Advent texts old and new, almost all by 20th- and 21st-century composers, a reminder of Nethsingha’s consistent championing of new and recent music across the 15 years of his St John’s tenure. Here, the most striking contributions are from women composers, starting with Cheryl Frances-Hoad’s Lo! The desert depths are stirr’d, whose twanged harp bass notes launch the album so grippingly. Setting an 18th-century text by Charles Coffin, it combines desert-like arid textures with an engagingly dance-like gait.

Helen Grime’s Telling is her first work for unaccompanied choir, but you’d never guess it from the confident way in which the voices are deployed across a range of carefully gradated dynamics, with harmonic dissonances spicing up its bright textures. Judith Weir’s Drop down ye heavens, from above (originally written for the Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge in 1984) starts and closes with sparse textures and quiet dynamics, but builds to a radiant, treble-topped climax.

If the main honours here fall to the distaff side, the other items are still impressive and varied, and many have links to Cambridge and St John’s. Advent Calendar, composed in 2002 by Nethsingha’s predecessor Philip Ledger (1937–2012) as a tribute to his predecessor, George Guest, sets a text by the former Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams. It reaches a vibrant climax in the arresting contrasts of its final stanza. Francis Pott’s There is no rose has a warmer harmonic language, while the late Simon Preston’s 1971 setting of the same 15th-century text alternates passages of seductively sumptuous harmony with snappier, jazzy sections.

There are also two settings of another 15th-century carol text, Adam lay ybounden, the first (with accompaniment) by Peter Warlock, the second (sung a cappella) by Philip Ledger. Perhaps the boldest juxtaposition is of Henry L’Estrange’s warmly radiant O virgo virginum (composed at the tender age of just 12!) with the contained astringency of Peter Maxwell Davies’s 1984 setting of George Mackay Brown’s One star, at last. An anonymous 15th-century carol, Nowel, nowel. Owt of your slepe provides a welcome spotlight on solo voices from the choral scholars, highlighting their characterful individuality rather than the more blended sound into which they are more usually subsumed. The disc reaches its ebullient conclusion with A Gallery Carol by John Gardner (1917–2011), best known for Tomorrow will be my dancing day, and contains similarly snappy syncopations, punctuated by massive organ chords.

Luxuriantly recorded, and with detailed notes by Martin Ennis, the disc as a whole presents a most satisfying experience from three remarkable years in the life of the St John’s Choir, and is a tribute to Nethsingha’s stewardship. Happily well-documented on disc, his will be a hard act to follow, but we hope that his successor Christopher Gray will lead them in many further recordings. In the meantime, this album is the ideal companion in the weeks leading up to Christmas 2023.

  • Naxos
  • Arcana

The Spin Doctor Europadisc's Weekly Column

Who is the Greatest of Them All?

Who is the Greatest of Them All?  29th November 2023

29th November 2023

It was probably in 1999 that I became aware of the scale of the problem and the sheer stupidity of it all: HMV stores (remember those?) and the UK’s Channel 4 network teamed up (together with minor input from Classic FM) to conduct a poll to determine the ‘Music of the Millennium’. Well, it was asking for trouble, wasn’t it? A millennium: that’s a thousand years by normal reckoning. Yet with the sole exception of the ‘Best Piece of Classical Music’* and ‘Best Classical Composer’** categories, the entire poll was dominated by music of the previous four decades. In a millennial context, the choices looked desperately myopic. Best Songwriter (of the Millennium, remember): John Lennon; of Franz Schubert and Robert Schumann, not a whiff, let alone Guillaume de Machaut or Josquin Desprez. Best Male Singer? Elvis Presley, followed by Robbie Williams and Michael Jackson. Sorry about... read more

View Older Posts

Gramophone Recording of the Month

Played on Record Review