TOMKINS O Give Thanks Unto the Lord: Choral Works

Record and Artist Details

Genre:

Vocal

Label: Resonus Classics

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 74

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: RES10253

RES10253. TOMKINS O Give Thanks Unto the Lord: Choral Works

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Death is swallowed up in victory Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
Preces and Responses Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
The Fourth Service, Movement: Magnificat Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
The Fourth Service, Movement: Nunc dimittis Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
Who can tell how oft he offendeth Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
In Nomine, 'gloria Tibi Trinitas' Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
Give sentence with me, O God Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
The Seventh Service, Movement: Magnificat Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
The Seventh Service, Movement: Nunc dimittis Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
Jesus came when the doors were shut Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
Turn unto the Lord Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
A Fantasy Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
(The) heavens declare Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
Remember me, O Lord Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
O Lord, how manifold are thy works Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
O give thanks unto the Lord Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ
Voluntary Thomas Tomkins, Composer
Carl Jackson, Conductor
Hampton Court Palace Chapel Royal Choir
Rufus Frowde, Organ

Along with Tallis, Byrd and Gibbons (and, later, Purcell), Thomas Tomkins was a member of the Chapel Royal – the peripatetic ensemble of singers, organists and composers who followed English monarchs from palace to palace, providing music for royal worship. Today each palace has its own choir, and it seems only fitting that one of these – the Choir of the Chapel Royal, Hampton Court – should step up to celebrate a composer rarely in the choral spotlight.

The selection of works (including two recorded premieres, the verse anthem Death is swallowed up in victory and the Magnificat and Nunc dimittis of the Seventh Service) seems designed to take the road less travelled and throws up plenty of interest. The opener Death is swallowed up flickers with duelling treble soloists, whose dotted rhythms here crackle and spark with energy; the psalm-setting Give ear unto my words manipulates its four-part texture to careful effect; while a Gloria tibi Trinitas for solo organ finds the two hands chasing one another up and down the organ in an extended game of cat and mouse.

The quality of the treble-singing under music director Carl Jackson is superb, offering a more focused, crisper alternative to blowsier rival recordings from New College and Magdalen, Oxford (although the latter’s collaboration with Fretwork lends accompaniments some welcome textural grit in contrast to the glassy smoothness of Hampton Court’s chamber organ). Men’s voices are more mixed.

Less madrigalian in his style than Weelkes or Gibbons, Tomkins’s weaker rhetorical instinct is underlined here by the variety of texts, whose vivid contrasts draw remarkably consistent responses from the composer. Perhaps a disc, then, to dip into for individual works rather than a recital to take at a gulp.

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