Vaughan Williams Choral Works
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Ralph Vaughan Williams
Genre:
Vocal
Label: Hyperion
Magazine Review Date: 8/1992
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 73
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: CDA66569

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(A) Song of Thanksgiving |
Ralph Vaughan Williams, Composer
City of London Sinfonia Corydon Singers John Gielgud, Wheel of Fortune Woman John Scott, Organ London Oratory Junior Choir Lynne Dawson, Soprano Matthew Best, Conductor Ralph Vaughan Williams, Composer |
(3) Choral Hymns |
Ralph Vaughan Williams, Composer
City of London Sinfonia Corydon Singers John Bowen, Tenor Matthew Best, Conductor Ralph Vaughan Williams, Composer Roger Judd, Organ |
Magnificat |
Ralph Vaughan Williams, Composer
Catherine Wyn-Rogers, Contralto (Female alto) City of London Sinfonia Corydon Singers Matthew Best, Conductor Ralph Vaughan Williams, Composer Roger Judd, Organ |
(The) Shepherds of the Delectable Mountains |
Ralph Vaughan Williams, Composer
Adrian Thompson, Tenor Alan Opie, Baritone Bryn Terfel, Bass-baritone City of London Sinfonia Corydon Singers John Mark Ainsley, Tenor Jonathan Best, Bass Linda Kitchen, Soprano Matthew Best, Conductor Ralph Vaughan Williams, Composer |
(The) Old Hundredth Psalm Tune - 'All People that on Earth do Dwell' |
Ralph Vaughan Williams, Composer
City of London Sinfonia Corydon Singers Matthew Best, Conductor Ralph Vaughan Williams, Composer Roger Judd, Organ |
Author:
Hubert Foss, surveying the English public in 1949, conceded that it was gradually discovering Vaughan Williams in his old age. ''But,'' he asked, ''how often do we hear the Fourth Symphony, Flos Campi, the Magnificat, the Shelley songs? Is Hugh the Drover often played, or Sir John in Love?'' Ticking off that list now, with glances at the current Classical Catalogue, we can answer satisfactorily for our own time in respect of the first two items, but none too well for the rest. The stage works remain rarities, and both would be welcome on CD. For 'the Shelley songs' we probably have to look them up to see what they are (Six Choral Songs to be sung in time of War, 1940). Of the Magnificat this new record presents the only version presently available; and that goes for the rest of the works collected here.
The Magnificat (1930) is a wonderfully imaginative piece, using a solo flute (played with a fine range of colouring by Duke Dobing), to represent ''the disembodied, visiting spirit'', with women's voices for the Angels of the Annunciation, and Mary's song of praise set for mezzo-soprano or contralto. ''Ecstasy in austerity'' was Foss's phrase, a strange one in a way, for, as Christopher Palmer says in his excellent notes, there is a strongly sensuous element (he associates it with Debussy, and I seem to detect, momentarily, Puccini's Turandot). In fact, ''ecstasy in austerity'' would apply rather more aptly to The Shepherds of the Delectable Mountains, for the texture here is relatively spare, and emotion, though always present, is restrained in its expression in all but a few climactic phrases. The performance here is admirable in its unhurried, unpressured intensity, with some splendid singing by Bryn Terfel.
The Three Choral Hymns (1930) are for Easter, Christmas and Whitsunday, the Christmas hymn beautifully catching the mystery of the Incarnation in its gentle rise and fall. The 100th Psalm ends with the setting of the Old Hundredth hymn-tune used in the 1953 Coronation. And A Song of Thanksgiving (Thanksgiving for Victory as it was known when first performed in 1945) has a heartfelt richness to it, the sonority and breadth given ample space in the recording and performance. Sir John Gielgud's voice has no longer the sonority to match this wealth of choral and orchestral sound; but it is still a voice which I daresay many of us would wish to hear rather than any other.'
The Magnificat (1930) is a wonderfully imaginative piece, using a solo flute (played with a fine range of colouring by Duke Dobing), to represent ''the disembodied, visiting spirit'', with women's voices for the Angels of the Annunciation, and Mary's song of praise set for mezzo-soprano or contralto. ''Ecstasy in austerity'' was Foss's phrase, a strange one in a way, for, as Christopher Palmer says in his excellent notes, there is a strongly sensuous element (he associates it with Debussy, and I seem to detect, momentarily, Puccini's Turandot). In fact, ''ecstasy in austerity'' would apply rather more aptly to The Shepherds of the Delectable Mountains, for the texture here is relatively spare, and emotion, though always present, is restrained in its expression in all but a few climactic phrases. The performance here is admirable in its unhurried, unpressured intensity, with some splendid singing by Bryn Terfel.
The Three Choral Hymns (1930) are for Easter, Christmas and Whitsunday, the Christmas hymn beautifully catching the mystery of the Incarnation in its gentle rise and fall. The 100th Psalm ends with the setting of the Old Hundredth hymn-tune used in the 1953 Coronation. And A Song of Thanksgiving (Thanksgiving for Victory as it was known when first performed in 1945) has a heartfelt richness to it, the sonority and breadth given ample space in the recording and performance. Sir John Gielgud's voice has no longer the sonority to match this wealth of choral and orchestral sound; but it is still a voice which I daresay many of us would wish to hear rather than any other.'
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