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		  Benjamin BRITTEN (1913-1976)
     A Festival of Britten Fancie (1961) [1:04]
     Festival Te Deum, Op. 32 (1945)* [6:28]
     A Hymn of St Columba (1962)* [1:48]
     Hymn to St Peter, Op. 56a (1955)* [6:15]
     Three Two-part Songs (1932) [6:13]
     A Hymn to the Virgin (1930)** [3:27]
     Jubilate Deo in C (1934)* [2:40]
     Hymn to St Cecilia, Op. 27 (1942)*** [9:49]
     Te Deum in C (1934)** [8:16]
     The Ballad of Little Musgrave and Lady Barnard (1943)**** [10:30]
     Deus in adjutorium meum (1945)*** [5:10]
     Antiphon (1955)** [6:09]
     Jubilate Deo in E flat (1934)** [2:39]
     A Ceremony of Carols, Op. 28 (1942)***** [23:24]
     Rejoice in the Lamb, Festival Cantata, Op. 30 (1943)****** [18:23]
 
          National Youth Choirs of Great Britain/Ben Parry (overall director)
     Boys’ Choir/Greg Hallam; *Training Choir South/Greg Beardsell;
**Training Choir North/Dominic Peckham and Rachel Staunton; ****Cambiata
Voices/Niall Crowley; ***Chamber Choir/Ben Parry; *****Girls’
Choirs/Esther Jones; ******National Youth Choir/Robert Isaacs/James Sherlock
(organ, piano); Vicky Lester (harp)
 
		  ec. 11 April 2013, 23 and 28 August 2013, Tonbridge School Chapel;
18 August 2013, Oundle School Chapel; 30 August 2013, Sage, Gateshead. DDD
     Texts and English translations included
 
          DELPHIAN DCD34133    [70:36 + 41:49]  
		 
 
		  Delphian has issued several CDs already by the National Youth Choir 
            of Great Britain and those which have come my way have impressed me. 
            However, the NYCGB is one of what one might call a pyramid of no fewer 
            than eight ensembles that comprise the National Youth Choirs of Great Britain. This organisation, 
            established thirty years ago, caters for over 750 young singers aged 
            between 9 and 24. The choirs not only reflect the different age groups 
            but also levels of experience so that the youngest singers are includes 
            in the Boys’ and Girls’ Choirs while the Chamber Choir, 
            which numbers just thirty singers, is made up of young professionals 
            and singers in the process of training for a professional career. 
             
               
            When I was typing the heading to this review a Freudian slip, unnoticed 
            at first, led me to christen the choirs the National Youth Choirs 
            of Great Britten. Perhaps that’s not inappropriate for 
            Benjamin Britten wrote a great deal of music either for or involving 
            young singers and it’s highly apt that the various components 
            of the NYCGB should all have contributed to this centenary tribute. 
            The recordings were made, I presume, during the choirs’ annual 
            residential courses in summer 2013.  
               
            Each element of the NYCGB can be heard in this set. The Boys’ 
            Choir (trebles in school years 5 to 10 - from about 10 years of age 
            upwards) gives us a lively rendition of the boisterous little Shakespeare 
            setting, Fancie, but I wish that as well they’d been 
            given something more interesting that the Three Two-part Songs, settings 
            of Walter de la Mare, well though they sing them. Why not the Missa 
            Brevis in D?  
               
            The Cambiata Voices is a particularly interesting element of the National 
            Youth Choirs. This caters for boys in school years 6-10 whose voices 
            are migrating to tenor or bass. How good it is that these young singers 
            are not just left to fend for themselves but, instead, are given sympathetic 
            vocal guidance, the fruits of which we hear in The Ballad of Little 
            Musgrave and Lady Barnard.   
          There are two Training Choirs. These are for mixed voices in school 
            years 9-13: from about the age of 14 upwards. Training Choir South 
            give us, among other things, the Festival Te Deum. The performance 
            is, perhaps, a little too slow and thoughtful at the start but breaks 
            strongly into life at ‘Thou art the King of Glory’. We 
            shall hear a number of excellent soloists in this collection, drawn 
            from the choirs, but Kirsty O’Neill, who features here, is one 
            of the very best. Her solo at ‘O Lord, bless thy people’ 
            is exceptionally good, exhibiting a lovely rounded tone, excellent 
            clarity and a fine feeling for expression. Watch for her name: she 
            could have quite a future.  
               
            Not to be outdone, Training Choir North also give a very good account 
            of themselves, especially in the Te Deum in C where they, too, benefit 
            from a very good solo soprano. They also perform a couple of less 
            well-known pieces. The Jubilate in E flat was, apparently, withdrawn 
            by Britten and while it’s interesting to hear it the later C 
            major setting is a finer piece. Antiphon is a setting of George 
            Herbert, not to be confused with the Vaughan Williams piece of the 
            same name - from the Five Mystical Songs - which sets different 
            lines by Herbert. It’s a good piece and here the Training Choir 
            puts no fewer than three very good soprano soloists into the spotlight. 
             
               
            The Girls’ Choirs, Senior and Junior, which are made up of singers 
            in school years 6-10, combine for A Ceremony of Carols. This 
            is a very different performance from many that you’ll hear on 
            disc because the choir is so substantial. For some of the movements 
            either just the Senior or Junior Choir sings but when they combine 
            there must be some 150 voices involved. The singing is consistently 
            excellent but because the ensemble is so large a sense of intimacy 
            is missing, inevitably. There doesn’t seem to be much attempt 
            at a processional effect at the start - the music just starts loudly 
            and close-up - though, oddly, there is a recessional at the 
            end and it’s quite well managed. Despite the size of the combined 
            choir ‘Wolcum Yole!’ evidences good, light sound and tight 
            ensemble work. The Junior Choir show excellent attention to dynamics 
            in ‘That yongë child’. I’m not quite so convinced 
            by ‘This little Babe’ where the size of the choir rather 
            tends to cloud Britten’s teeming canons but in the penultimate 
            movement the words of ‘Adam lay ibounden’ are incisively 
            delivered. Despite reservations over the size of the choir this is, 
            on its own terms, a very good performance, fully up to the high standards 
            elsewhere in this collection.  
               
            At the pinnacle of the NYCGB organisation stand two choirs. The National 
            Youth Choir itself includes mixed voices from school year 11 (from 
            about the age of 16) up to age 22. This choir contributes a very good 
            performance of Rejoice in the Lamb, Britten’s highly 
            original setting of Christopher Smart’s somewhat eccentric words. 
            I particularly admired the atmospheric start of the piece and, indeed, 
            throughout the performance Robert Isaacs draws fine, responsive singing 
            from his choir. There’s a very good solo quartet, amongst whom 
            soprano Bethany Partridge is outstanding.  
               
            She’s a member of the Chamber Choir, as is Rebekah Jones, the 
            alto soloist in Rejoice in the Lamb. This is an elite group 
            of some thirty singers, aged up to 24, who are either training for 
            or have already embarked upon a professional career. This group performs 
            Deus in adjutorium meum, an a cappella setting 
            in Latin of Psalm 70. It’s described in the notes as “gritty 
            yet radiant”. I’m not sure I’ve heard it before 
            and its inclusion here, in an excellent performance, is very welcome. 
            There are no issues of unfamiliarity with Hymn to St Cecilia. 
            This is excellent and the light airiness of Britten’s textures 
            is very well realised.  
               
            Delphian’s recordings, made at three separate venues, are all 
            very good, as we’ve come to expect from this label. The comprehensive 
            documentation includes notes by the Britten biographer, Paul Kildea. 
             
               
            This is a very fine collection which will give much pleasure. The 
            singing is skilful throughout. Above all, the listener consistently 
            feels the commitment and enthusiasm of these young musicians. Obviously, 
            these recordings remind us what a skilled composer for choirs Britten 
            was. Equally important, however, is the focus that this pair of CDs 
            puts on the National Youth Choirs of Great Britain. It was a particularly 
            happy idea to include contributions from all the constituent elements, 
            showing the developmental progression that’s possible for young 
            singers within this remarkable organisation. We read so many alarming 
            reports these days about the apparent decline in musical education 
            in British schools, especially in the state sector, it’s very 
            reassuring to remember that there are organisations such as this - 
            and the youth orchestras - that keep the flag flying so well. I think 
            Benjamin Britten would have loved this album and that he’d rejoice 
            to know that these young people are being so effectively trained, 
            not just in his music but in the joys of singing.  
               
            John Quinn  
             
             
            Britten discography & review 
            index  
             
             
           
          
		 
	    
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