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			Paul MEALOR (b. 1975) 
   A Tender Light  
  Ubi caritas [3:53] 
  Locus iste [6:32] 
  She walks in beauty [4:49] 
  Ave Maria [7:04] 
  Now sleeps the crimson petal (Four madrigals on Rose texts) [12:49] 
  Stabat Mater [23:26] 
  Salvator mundi: Greater Love [6:20] 
  O vos omnes [5:20] 
  Wherever You Are* [3:00]
 
             
            Tenebrae; * Alexander Mason (organ) 
  Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/Nigel Short
 
			rec. 11-14 July 2011, St. Jude-on-the-Hill Church, Hampstead Garden Suburb, London; *12 December 2011, St Giles, Cripplegate, London 
  Original texts and English translations included. Notes in English and Welsh
 
                
              DECCA 4764814 [73:54]  
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                  In terms of exposure for his music Paul Mealor enjoyed something 
                  of an annus mirabilis in 2011. In April, at the request 
                  of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, his Ubi caritas 
                  was sung at their wedding and was heard by a huge global audience. 
                  Towards the end of the year his song, Wherever You Are 
                  was featured in the BBC television series in which Gareth Malone 
                  formed the Military Wives Choir. Their recording of Mealor’s 
                  song, which sets words taken from some of the letters between 
                  the wives and their husbands on active service in the UK Armed 
                  Forces, caught the imagination of the British public and sold 
                  in such numbers that it topped the UK pop charts at Christmas. 
                  Both pieces are included here. 
                    
                  When I heard Ubi caritas during the royal wedding I 
                  thought it was a somewhat grey piece. I now think that was an 
                  unfair judgement or maybe it’s just that the performance by 
                  Tenebrae gives the music a stronger profile? It’s a re-working 
                  of the music for a Tennyson setting, Now sleeps the crimson 
                  petal, which we shall encounter later on in this programme 
                  in its original version as the first of four pieces in the eponymous 
                  cycle. It’s most interesting to compare the two pieces: essentially, 
                  what Mealor did was to put the music into a higher key for Ubi 
                  caritas and, at the very end, a treble soloist sings a 
                  fragment of the Ubi caritas plainchant. Here the same 
                  soloist as sang at the wedding is used. I think the music itself 
                  actually fits the liturgical words rather better than the Tennyson 
                  text for which it was originally written. 
                    
                  At this point I think I should put my cards on the table and 
                  say that I don’t think Paul Mealor has been well served by the 
                  ordering of the music on this disc. There are far too many pieces 
                  following each other that are of a very similar stamp, which 
                  is to say the music proceeds homophonically, very often in block 
                  chords, and at a slow pace. It’s sincere and sometimes, as in 
                  the case, of Ave Maria, rather beautiful but one can 
                  have too much of a good thing and eventually I found myself 
                  yearning for some counterpoint or for music in a swifter tempo 
                  and, frankly, for some relief from block chord a cappella 
                  choral music. Swifter music eventually arrives when we reach 
                  the third of the Now sleeps the crimson petal set, 
                  ‘Upon a bank with roses’. This is an attractive setting in which 
                  the singers’ music suggests the sounds made by a trickling brook. 
                  However, one has had to wait rather a long time for this element 
                  of variety. 
                    
                  To be fair, the preceding tracks contain some good music: the 
                  aforementioned Ave Maria, for example, strikes me as 
                  a sincere, prayerful setting and the performance by Tenebrae 
                  is as beautiful as the music itself. The last of the four Now 
                  sleeps the crimson petal songs, ‘A Spotless Rose’, is also 
                  a good setting; it is described by the composer as the emotional 
                  heart of the cycle. We are back to slow block harmonies once 
                  again at the start but eventually some independent melodic lines 
                  break free and to good effect. 
                    
                  The main work on the disc is Stabat Mater, which Mealor 
                  tells us was written at a difficult point in his life. Unsurprisingly, 
                  therefore, it’s an intense piece, as befits the text. It consists 
                  of four movements which are played without a break. In the first, 
                  yet again, slow block harmonies prevail. This is grave music, 
                  which the choir sings unaccompanied. Especially remarkable here 
                  is the depth of the bass part. After 4:15 Mealor has set all 
                  of the text assigned to this music but he then repeats most 
                  of what we’ve already heard, which strikes me as a bit superfluous. 
                  The orchestra, which I take to be fairly small, then joins the 
                  choir for the remaining three movements. The second movement 
                  features an important soprano solo. Grace Davidson sings with 
                  lovely tone but, even when listening through headphones, I found 
                  it very difficult to make out all the words she sings. The music 
                  of this movement – and the performance it receives – is obviously 
                  deeply felt but I had an uneasy feeling that the material was 
                  being stretched a little too far. The third movement takes the 
                  form of a passacaglia and the tempo is vigorous. There’s real 
                  fire in this music, which is enhanced by Tenebrae’s dynamic 
                  singing. The fourth movement revisits material from the preceding 
                  movements, chiefly the first. A big climax is attained at ‘Paradisi 
                  gloria’ before the quiet, harp-decorated close. 
                    
                  Salvator mundi: Greater Love is an interesting piece. 
                  Mealor deploys an SATB solo quartet which sings words in Latin 
                  while the choir sings a different text in English. To spice 
                  things up the quartet’s music is in G minor while the choir’s 
                  material is in G major. The contrast of texture between quartet 
                  and choir is good and is enhanced by the ardour of the quartet’s 
                  contribution. 
                    
                  At the very end of the disc comes a ‘bonus track’, namely Wherever 
                  You Are with Grace Davidson singing the solo. Mealor has 
                  written a nice tune for this piece but I don’t think that was 
                  the real reason it became a smash ‘hit’. Rather it was the context 
                  and the fact that the wives of serving servicemen were singing 
                  the piece to and for their loved ones that made it take off 
                  commercially. The performance on this disc is a more sophisticated 
                  one – not that Gareth Malone’s choir lacked polish – but somehow 
                  the very sophistication is a bit misplaced: it becomes an art 
                  song rather than a song from the heart. Give me the Military 
                  Wives Choir any day. 
                    
                  I’m sorry that I’ve not been able to respond with more enthusiasm 
                  to this disc. Perhaps the contents don’t represent the full 
                  spectrum of Paul Mealor’s compositional style. There is some 
                  very nice music here and there’s absolutely no doubt of the 
                  composer’s sincerity. This is probably a disc better dipped 
                  into rather than listened to all in one go, as the reviewer 
                  is almost bound to do. That said, I can only report my impressions 
                  and, after listening several times, I find a worrying similarity 
                  about much of the music. I’m sure this disc will be a great 
                  commercial success and I hope it is: it’s excellent that a living 
                  composer, who has something worthwhile to say in his music, 
                  is getting this exposure and it’s also important that people 
                  get to know him for more than just two short pieces. The performances 
                  by Tenebrae are excellent, as one would expect from this source. 
                    
                  John Quinn
                                   
                  
                  
                  
                 
                 
                 
             
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