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A Mother’s Love: Music for Mary Edvard Grieg(1843-1907)
Ave Maris Stella [3:11] William Cornysh (c.1465-c.1523)
Ave Maria, Mater Dei [3:10] Josquin DES PREZ (c.1450-1521)
Gaude Virgo Mater Christi [2:40] Anton Bruckner (1824-1896)
Tota Pulchra Es Maria (Antiphon) [5:25] Camille Saint-Saens (1835-1921)
Ave Maria, Op.145 [2:49] Benjamin Britten (1913-1976)
A Hymn To The Virgin [3:41] Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1947)
Ave Maria, Op.23 no.2 [7:15] Jacob Obrecht (c.1450-1505)
Salve Regina [7:52] Margaret Rizza (b.1929)
Ave Generosa [6:12] Anonymous
Alma Redemptoris Mater [4:47] Gabriel FaurÉ (1845-1924)
Ave Maria, Op.93 [3:41] Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (1525/6-1594)
Sicut Lilium Inter Spinas [3:21] Franz Liszt (1811-1886)
Ave Maris Stella [5:08] Edward Elgar (1857-1934)
Ave Maria, Op.2 no.2 [2:54] Maurice DuruflÉ (1902-1986)
Tota Pulchra Es, Maria [2:23] Anonymous (Plainsong)
Salve Regina [2:55] Orlando de Lassus (1532-1594)
Salve Regina [4:00]
The Sixteen/Harry
Christophers
Huw Williams (organ)
rec. 12-15 June, 2007, St. Paul’s Church, Deptford
Texts not included. UNIVERSAL 476 6295 [73:15]
Devotion
to the Virgin Mary has fuelled some of the very greatest
art of the western world. This is true in architecture, poetry,
the visual arts and, of course, in music. More than a few
(to put it mildly) of the masterpieces of plainsong, of the
Notre Dame school of composers, of Palestrina and Monteverdi,
of Bach – and many more – were written in the service of
such devotion. Think of all those thousands of settings of
the Alma Redemptoris Mater, the Salve Regina,
the Ave Maria, Ave Maris Stella, the Stabat
Mater etc. etc.
Marian
devotion is the theme for this latest in the Sixteen’s admirable
series of ‘popular’ anthologies – following on from best-selling
discs such as Ikon (Universal 476 3160) and Renaissance:
Music for Inner Peace (Universal 987 0128). In calling
these discs ‘popular’ I intend only to distinguish them from
the choir’s more scholarly (in terms of documentation, not
attitude to performance) and specialised issues such as their
5 CDs of music from the Eton Choirbook (available as a box
set, Coro COR16040) or CDs of music by Victoria (COR16007,
16021 and 16033) and, interalia, Robert Carver
(COR16051) and Britten (COR16006, 16034 and 16038). The
musical standards so evident on discs such as these are matched
on A Mother’s Love, even if the presentation is more
popular.
One
of the great virtues of the Sixteen is their accomplished
versatility. Under the direction of Harry Christophers they
really do seem to be able to do justice to pretty well every
area of the choral repertoire. They can match the specialised
Renaissance choirs in their territory – but also give outstanding
performances of works and composers that most such choirs
would probably hesitate to tackle.
So,
in this present collection, we range from Plainsong to Duruflé,
via Josquin des Prez and Palestrina, from anonymous music
of the English middle ages to Margaret Rizza, via Greig,
Liszt, Saint-Saens and Britten.
Margaret
Rizza? She doesn’t seem to have made a previous appearance
on MusicWeb. I have seen her name before and – I’m not sure
why – I confess that I had assumed her music to be some sort
of New Age vapidity. Hearing her Ave generosa, a setting
of words by Hildgard of Bingen makes me ashamed of my ignorant
prejudice. It is music of peace and spirituality, but of
real substance and intelligence, subtle in its simplicity.
Margaret Rizza certainly has a ‘proper’ musical background.
As Margaret Lensky she was an opera
singer who performed at La Scala and Glyndebourne; she worked
with Benjamin Britten and Leonard Bernstein, and later taught
at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. She came to both
composition and Christianity in her fifties and sixties,
and her thought and her music (very much tied to the practice
of prayer) have been much influenced by that remarkable Canadian
Benedictine John Main (1926-1982). If all of Rizza’s music
is as good as this piece it deserves serious attention.
Elsewhere
we are largely in more familiar territory. With a programme
so various, no one listener is likely to be equally enamoured
of every piece. For myself, the sublimity of Palestrina’s Sicut
illium inter spinas and Cornysh’s Ave Maria Mater
Dei are more deeply satisfying than some of the nineteenth
century pieces. Others may well feel differently, but it
is hard to imagine that any lover of the sacred choral tradition
will not find much to enjoy here. The sheer stylistic variety
of the collection (though some interesting continuities do
emerge) perhaps makes it not a CD which one will often want
to play straight through, but it is surely one to which most
listeners will return to hear specific pieces again. Both
the perfection of the ensemble and the quality of soloists
such as the tenor Mark Dobell and the sopranos Grace Davidson
and Libby Crabtree make this a valuable and inspiring disc.
Experienced collectors will have texts to hand for many of
these pieces; it is a shame that, for the newcomer who might
be attracted by such an album, none are provided.
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