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            John RUTTER (b. 
              1945) 
              Gloria (1974) [17:21] 
              Magnificat (1990) [39:15] 
              Te Deum (1988) [7:54] 
                
              Elizabeth Cragg (soprano); Tom Winpenny (organ)  
              The Choirs of St Albans Cathedral  
              Ensemble DeChorum/Andrew Lucas 
              rec. Cathedral and Abbey Church of St Alban, St Albans, Hertfordshire, 
              UK, 13-14 July, 2010 (Magnificat) and 16-17 July, 2010 (Gloria 
              and Te Deum). DDD 
              Texts included 
                
              NAXOS 8.572653 [64:40]   
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                  This recording has been warmly received on Musicweb by Nick 
                  Barnard (in CD form) and Brian 
                  Wilson (download). Naxos already have in their catalogue 
                  excellent versions of Rutter’s Mass of the Children 
                  (review) 
                  and his beautiful Requiem (review). 
                  Now they add this collection of significant choral works. Competition 
                  is fierce in the shape of the composer’s own recordings 
                  of the Gloria and of the Magnificat - he’s 
                  also recorded the Te Deum on a disc of his shorter choral 
                  works. In addition there’s a very fine Hyperion disc by 
                  Polyphony and Stephen Layton, which includes the Gloria. 
                  However, this newcomer can more than hold up its head in this 
                  company. It also enjoys a point of differentiation over both 
                  the Rutter and Layton recordings, both of which use mixed adult 
                  choirs whereas this Naxos CD allows us to hear boy and girl 
                  trebles as well as male altos; that gives a nice edge to the 
                  choral sound.  
                     
                  The composer himself has written the booklet note and it’s 
                  a good one - he writes here at slightly greater length than 
                  he usually does for his own Collegium label. Writing of the 
                  Gloria he makes a very interesting point. The piece was 
                  Rutter’s first major overseas commission and the call 
                  came from an American choral director, the late Mel Olson. Mr 
                  Olson was very specific in his commissioning requirements and 
                  even came over to meet Rutter in the UK to discuss the proposed 
                  piece. Rutter is generous in talking of Olson’s contribution 
                  not just to the creative process around this work but also in 
                  a way that clearly influenced Rutter’s future output: 
                  “Much of the credit must go to Mel Olson … because, 
                  in telling me what he was looking for in a new choral work, 
                  he was telling me what thousands of other choral directors were 
                  looking for too.”    
                   
                  That seems to me to make two key points about John Rutter’s 
                  music and about the success that it’s enjoyed over the 
                  years. Firstly, he writes music that people want to perform 
                  and to hear. Secondly, his music, though enjoyable to perform 
                  is not always as easy as it sounds: it challenges the performers 
                  without putting insuperable obstacles in their path. I sang 
                  in the Gloria some years ago: it was great fun and highly 
                  effective but it also contains several traps for the unwary, 
                  especially in the third movement. Likewise the opening pages 
                  of the Requiem are testing. And only recently I spoke 
                  with a friend of mine who has several decades of choral experience, 
                  including a stint in the Ambrosian Singers. He related that 
                  the choir with which he currently sings, which is directed by 
                  one of the UK’s well-known chorus masters, had just performed 
                  the Magnificat and he admitted that they had found some 
                  passages very tricky. So while John Rutter’s music may 
                  be engaging it should never be underestimated.  
                     
                  The present performances are splendidly assured and delivered 
                  with great enthusiasm. The Gloria and Te Deum 
                  are both scored for SATB chorus with brass, percussion and organ. 
                  The outer sections of the three-movement Gloria are really 
                  exciting here and in the final movement the quirky fugue (‘Cum 
                  Sancto Spiritu’) is tossed off with panache. The more 
                  reflective central movement features some well-taken treble 
                  and alto solos. In the lively outer movements the accompaniment 
                  is sharp and punchy, as it should be.  
                     
                  The Magnificat - another American commission - is a more 
                  substantial piece, laid out in seven movements and Rutter incorporates 
                  some other, very relevant words into the text of the canticle 
                  itself. Much of the music is buoyant and festive and all those 
                  parts are well done. However, there’s more powerful music 
                  to be found in the third movement, ‘Quia fecit mihi magna’, 
                  where the singers deliver the choral fanfares strongly. And 
                  in the fifth section, ‘Fecit potentiam’, the jazzy, 
                  slightly menacing rhythms are brought off very well. There’s 
                  an important part for a soprano soloist and Elizabeth Cragg 
                  offers some pleasing singing. Some may feel that her vibrato 
                  is a little on the rich side but she sings expressively.   
                   
                   
                  This disc contains highly enjoyable music and it sounds as if 
                  the performers were relishing the experience. Whilst the other 
                  recordings, mentioned above, are by no means displaced Andrew 
                  Lucas and his admirable St Alban’s forces offer a very 
                  valid alternative and at the Naxos price it deserves to be snapped 
                  up by a lot of collectors.  
                     
                  John Quinn   
                 
                  
                 
                 
             
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