These two choirs have each made several recordings 
        for Delphian and the label has brought them together once before to make 
        a very fine recording of Rodion Shchedrin’s 
The Sealed Angel 
        (
review). 
        Now, four years later, they have been reunited to bring us a very different 
        programme, comprising High Romantic German music. 
          
        It’s in the nature of student choirs that there’s a constant 
        membership churn as students leave on completing their studies to be replaced 
        by new arrivals. I doubt that many if any singers from the Shchedrin recording 
        remain but the excellence of the choral sound and musicianship of the 
        combined choir is a constant, I think. What Delphian has dubbed its ‘superchoir’ 
        - and why not? - comprised sixty-three singers (19/14/12/18) for this 
        recording. That includes three low basses who are guest singers, presumably 
        for the Strauss. The choir makes a splendid sound. There’s no hint 
        of unwieldiness despite the size of the ensemble and the sound is fresh 
        and clear yet, despite the age of the singers, it has plenty of body too. 
        I enjoyed listening to the superchoir very much. 
          
        The freshness is perhaps most evident of all in the performance of Schubert’s 
        
Gott ist mein Hirt, a German version of Psalm 23. This is for women’s 
        voices and the sound that the sopranos and altos make here is most appealing. 
        The only thing that spoils the performance for me is the use of a fortepiano. 
        No doubt this is authentic in the sense that this would have been the 
        sort of instrument that would have been heard in Schubert’s time 
        but these days we hear Schubert’s keyboard parts played so often 
        on a modern grand piano and I wonder if achieving true authenticity should 
        have meant using a smaller group of singers also. I’m afraid the 
        tinkling sound of the instrument rather trivialises the accompaniment 
        to my ears, though that’s very much a personal view and my comments 
        in no way reflect adversely on the player, David Ward. 
          
        The rest of the programme is unaccompanied. The Brahms motet is right 
        in the mainstream of the Lutheran lineage. It gets a robust performance, 
        though that doesn’t preclude some pleasing shading in the fourth 
        verse, and the concluding Amen is strongly projected. The set of four 
        Schumann part songs also come off well. I particularly admired the lively 
        rhythms and bright choral sound in the second song, ‘Ungewisses 
        Licht’, while the concluding ‘Talismane’ benefits from 
        the conviction and vitality that these young singers bring to the music. 
        
          
        The three songs by Cornelius were new to me and I found much to admire 
        in them. They’re good examples of German Romantic choral music and 
        they seem to be excellently written for choir. In the first and last songs 
        the choir divides into eight parts. Though I was unfamiliar with the music 
        these performances seem to be very fine and the music is presented with 
        firm conviction. The Cornelius pieces are conducted by David Trendell, 
        who also takes charge of the Strauss; the remainder of the programme is 
        in the equally expert hands of Gonville & Caius College’s Geoffrey 
        Webber. 
          
        So to David Trendell falls the task of directing the piece which I suspect 
        was the 
raison d’être for combining the choirs 
        in the first place. The eight-part textures of the Cornelius are as nothing 
        compared with the luxuriance of Strauss’s writing in his 
Deutsche 
        Motette. Here the choral writing splits into as many as sixteen separate 
        parts plus a solo quartet - and there are small parts for a further three 
        soloists at one juncture. Strauss sets Rückert’s lines to music 
        of significant complexity that makes great demands on the singers. To 
        be honest I wondered, before playing the disc, whether these young singers 
        would have the vocal maturity and sheer heft necessary to deliver such 
        music convincingly but within a couple of minutes it was evident that 
        and such fears were groundless. The choir puts over Strauss’s rich, 
        complex textures with great assurance and the requisite tonal strength 
        and warmth. There’s some lovely, firm quiet singing and at the rapturous 
        climaxes there’s no lack of full-throated tone. The solo quartet 
        does well in their taxing music with Helen Massey’s soaring soprano 
        a particular asset. 
          
        In recording the 
Deutsche Motette Paul Baxter has very sensibly 
        opted to produce a sound that clarifies the often complex and eventful 
        polyphony, thereby avoiding an aural mush. The singers appear to be fairly 
        close to the microphones - the soloists in the foreground - but Baxter 
        has skilfully managed to give us clarity without producing a clinical 
        sound; he’s made good use of the natural resonance of the church 
        where the recording was made and the results are excellent. The listener 
        can hear a great deal of what’s going on and one can only admire 
        the tireless efforts of these student singers. Even though I’m a 
        great fan of Strauss I’m not wholly convinced by the piece, I have 
        to admit. It does seem to me to be somewhat prolix at times and over-complicated. 
        On the other hand one can simply surrender and sit back to enjoy the luxuriant 
        choral textures. That’s what I did and I enjoyed this highly assured 
        performance very much. 
          
        This is a highly desirable disc of interesting music in excellent and 
        committed performances which have been expertly recorded. A well-produced 
        booklet, including good notes by David Trendell completes the attractions 
        of this release. 
          
        
John Quinn 
          
        High Romantic German choral music in excellent and committed performances.