Samuel Sebastian WESLEY (1810-1876) Ascribe 
          Unto the Lord
          Blessed be the God and Father - anthem for four-part choir 
          and organ (1833) [7:23]
          
Wash me throughly from my wickedness - anthem for four-part 
          choir and organ (nd) [4:35]
          
Ascribe unto the Lord - anthem for four-part choir and organ 
          (1851) [14:00]
          
Samuel WESLEY (1766-1837)
          Psalms 42 and 43 (nd.) [7:27] 
Samuel Sebastian WESLEY
          Magnificat and Nunc dimittis in E major (1844) [10:13]
          
The wilderness and the solitary place - anthem for five-part 
          choir and organ (1832) [12:38]
          
Larghetto in F sharp minor (c. 1842) [5:54]
          
O give thanks unto the Lord - anthem for five-part choir and 
          organ (1835) [8:12]
          
O Thou who camest from above - hymn for four-part choir and 
          organ (1834) [2:41]
          
Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace - anthem for five-part 
          choir and organ (c. 1850) [3:55]
          The Choir of St John's College, Cambridge/Andrew Nethsingha
          John Challenger (organ)
          rec. 20-22 April 2012, St John's College Chapel, Cambridge
          
CHANDOS 
CHAN 
          10751 [77:10]
 
         
          
            Comparable Wesley Anthem Recordings:-
             
            York 
            Minster (2010)
            Clare 
            College, Cambridge (2006)
            Exeter 
            College, Oxford (2002)
             
            Samuel Sebastian Wesley was one of the major figures of Victorian 
            music. In addition to his fame as a composer he was equally well-known 
            - or infamous - for his obstreperous personality and his constant 
            efforts to raise the standards of cathedral performance and composition. 
            He served in five churches and four cathedrals in the course of his 
            career. When one also considers that he was the grandson of the great 
            hymn-writer, the grand nephew of the Apostle of Methodism and the 
            son of an equally talented and eccentric composer, one could see that 
            he would be hard to miss in the mid-Victorian world.
             
            This disc comprises several of Wesley’s most famous anthems as well 
            as an Evening Service (part of a set of services for the complete 
            day), a well-known hymn (Hereford), an organ Larghetto 
            and a sturdy psalm setting by Wesley’s father Samuel. While Samuel 
            Sebastian is known as a composer of anthems and hymns, he also wrote 
            a large amount of organ music, much of it for domestic, not ecclesiastical, 
            consumption. The Larghetto was written for chamber organ 
            and is in a more classical style than the anthems but equally demonstrative 
            of Wesley’s sensitivity to key relationships. The Magnificat and 
            Nunc Dimittis impresses with its skilful writing in eight parts 
            and Wesley’s ability to set this somewhat difficult text as dramatically 
            as he does his anthems.
             
            Wesley inaugurated his anthem-writing career with The Wilderness 
            and the Solitary Place of 1832. This is a mini-oratorio and its 
            complexity must have astounded listeners at the premiere in Hereford 
            Cathedral. Equally astounding would have been its operaticsense of 
            drama and its independent organ part. Blessed be the God and Father, 
            written about a year later, is equally impressive, showing a great 
            advance in Wesley’s harmonic and dramatic abilities. Somewhat less 
            inspiring is O Give Thanks Unto the Lord, but this still 
            shows increasing technical ability and has a beautiful treble solo.
             
            The key to Wesley’s anthems is his skill in part-writing. He uses 
            this ability to focus and increase the dramatic intensity of the music. 
            This is no more evident than in the famous short anthem Wash Me 
            Throughly where the vocal lines convey the isolation so evident 
            in the text of Psalm 51. Ascribe unto the Lord (from 
            c. 1851) is another extended anthem with an almost programmatic contrast 
            between the idol-worshippers and those “that fear the Lord”. The spirit 
            of Mendelssohn is very evident in this work but the vocal texture 
            is all Wesley. The last anthem on the disc Thou Wilt Keep Him 
            in Perfect Peace is perhaps the ultimate refinement of Wesley’s 
            life-long search for the utmost simplicity of both emotion and means 
            of expression.
             
            Most of the works on this disc have been recorded many times before 
            (see below). Only the Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis is something 
            of a rarity. Sonically, the combination here of Wesley’s music and 
            Scott’s chapel - roughly contemporaneous as they are - is not always 
            felicitous. There is a frequent deadening of the basses’ lowest notes 
            and the opposite effect on the trebles. The St. John’s choir itself 
            sings beautifully, especially in the larger, five-part, anthems, although 
            the there are some individual problems with bass and treble solos. 
            The organist John Challenger is to be commended both for his playing 
            both of the Larghetto and of the accompaniments to the anthems.
             
            The chief merit of this disc, however, is the leadership of Andrew 
            Nethsingha. He brings complete clarity to the complex vocal lines 
            while never losing sight of the dramatic import of the text and of 
            the overall musical structure. His previous recordings at St. John’s 
            (see reviews 1, 
            2) 
            have frequently been exemplary and this one is no exception. For this 
            reason this disc ranks highly as a basic compendium of Wesley’s music.
            
William Kreindler
          
          see also 
            review by Johan van Veen