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Britten / Finzi / Holst - Works for Chorus and Orchestra | Chandos - Classics CHAN10783X

Britten / Finzi / Holst - Works for Chorus and Orchestra

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Label: Chandos - Classics

Cat No: CHAN10783X

Barcode: 0095115178324

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Genre: Vocal/Choral

Release Date: 1st July 2013

Contents

Artists

Alison Barlow (soprano)
John Mark Ainsley (tenor)
David Hoult (baritone)
Stephen Varcoe (baritone)
John Alley (organ)
Britten Singers
City of London Sinfonia

Conductor

Richard Hickox

Works

Britten, Benjamin

Cantata Misericordium, op.69
Chorale after an old French carol
Deus in adjutorium

Finzi, Gerald

Requiem de Camera

Holst, Gustav

Psalms (2), H117

Artists

Alison Barlow (soprano)
John Mark Ainsley (tenor)
David Hoult (baritone)
Stephen Varcoe (baritone)
John Alley (organ)
Britten Singers
City of London Sinfonia

Conductor

Richard Hickox

About

Gerald Finzi dedicated his Requiem da camera (1924) to the memory of his teacher, Ernest Farrar, who was killed on active service in September 1918. Finzi was devastated by the loss and here, in the second and fourth movements in particular, he offers his own sedate impression of the war, in which ploughboys-turned-soldiers glimpse their last of England before the music, landscape and innocence are lost in the gathering darkness. Finzi later rewrote the third movement, but the instrumentation of the new version was left incomplete. With the blessing of the Finzi family, the orchestration was completed by Philip Thomas on the basis of extensive surviving sketches, and the complete work was first performed in 1990.

Also on this disc are three works by Benjamin Britten. In Deus in adjutorium meum, the composer sets Psalm 70 in Latin for unaccompanied mixed voices. The work was written for the 1945 production of Ronald Duncan’s play 'This Way to the Tomb'. During the 1980s, many short pieces which Britten had originally written as part of his extensive music for radio and theatre, and which were subsequently forgotten, reclaimed their place in the limelight. The Chorale after an Old French Carol is one such work, the words deriving from 'A Christmas Oratorio' which W H Auden had written for Britten to set. Cantata misericordium marked Britten’s fiftieth year, Britten premiering it in 1963.

Gustav Holst wrote Psalm 86 and Psalm 148 in 1912 before he achieved his breakthrough as a composer. As Director of Music at the St Paul’s Girls School, Holst wrote this work for the inauguration of the school’s new organ in 1910, using a favourite hymn tune from Cölner Gesangbuch of 1623, set to a Biblical paraphrase of Psalm 148.

Hi-Fi News wrote of this disc when first released: ‘The choice of a small choir gives these pieces a sense of intimacy and yet one of intensity; there’s a feeling that Richard Hickox had inspired everyone to enthusiasm for his mixed programme.’

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