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English Visionaries
Birmingham Conservatoire, Chamber Choir, Nicholas Morris
English Visionaries
Genres: Opera & Classical Vocal, Classical
 
SOMM's new release, English Visionaries, adds yet another delightful CD to its enviable catalogue of English choral music, the fifth disc in the label's successful collaboration with the Birmingham Conservatoire Chamber Ch...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Birmingham Conservatoire, Chamber Choir, Nicholas Morris
Title: English Visionaries
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Somm Recordings
Release Date: 9/30/2016
Genres: Opera & Classical Vocal, Classical
Style: Symphonies
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 748871015920

Synopsis

Product Description
SOMM's new release, English Visionaries, adds yet another delightful CD to its enviable catalogue of English choral music, the fifth disc in the label's successful collaboration with the Birmingham Conservatoire Chamber Choir and Paul Spicer. Their disc of Ireland and Delius Partsongs (SOMMCD 0119) has garnered 5-star reviews whilst their disc of Stanford Partsongs (SOMMCD 0128) was chosen as 13th out of 24 discs considered the best new releases of 2013 on Classic FM. Their disc of rare repertoire by Herbert Howells (SOMMCD 0140) was Editor's Choice in Gramophone (December 2014) and received 5 stars in Choir and Organ Magazine.

Above all, the repertoire chosen by Paul Spicer for this disc dispels the thought that the music of Vaughan Williams, Gustav Holst, and Herbert Howells is 'English' in a derogatory sense, recalling more Elisabeth Lutyen's 'cowpat school' label than that of 'visionary'. As is amply demonstrated here, all three were composers of enormous transcendent vision, forging a uniquely English musical revolution.

One need only hear the soaring lines of Howells' the House of the Mind to recall the rarefied ecstasy of his betterknown Hymnus Paradisi. The inexorable build of Vaughan Williams's Lord, Thou Hast Been our Refuge scales similar heights, as does the other worldly harmonic and contrapuntal landscape of Holst's the Evening Watch and Sing Me the Men. Vaughan Williams's status as a revolutionary is strongly evident in his Mass in G Minor, a sublimation of late renaissance music into something powerfully new. He dedicated this inspired work to his friend Gustav Holst in 1921. His post-war (1956), technically virtuosic A Vision of Aeroplanes provides an enormous challenge to the performers, and a marked contrast to the warmth of Prayer to the Father of Heaven with which it opens the disc