Stephanie MARTIN (b. 1962)
Winter Nights
Winter Nights [22:47]
Portinari Nativity [3:33]
Legend of the Bird [4:14]
Of the Glorious City [3:33]
Canterbury [5:13]
Rise Up My Love [4:04]
When You Are Old [3:04]
And as I Wake [5:51]
God So Loved the World [3:33]
Now the Queen of Seasons [3:23]
Michael Robert-Broder (baritone); Nicole Bellamy (piano)
True North Brass
Pax Christi Chorale and Orchestra/Stephanie Martin
rec. January 2015, Grace Church on-the-Hill, Toronto, Canada
English texts included
SJM 010 [58:38]
Stephanie Martin is a Canadian conductor and
composer. By the time this review appears she will have stepped down as
conductor of the Pax Christi Chorale after twenty years in post. She’s
also a past Director of Music at the Church of St Mary Magdalene,
Toronto, the church where Healey Willan was Director of Music
(1921-68). I see from her website that during her time with Pax Christi
Chorale she’s conducted them in a wide range of demanding repertoire.
In particular, she’s expressed her affection for English music through
performances of, inter alia, Elgar (The Kingdom, Dream
of Gerontius and Music Makers) and Parry (Judith
– the North American premiere – and, very recently Ode on the
Nativity.) Her farewell concerts at the end of April consist of a
pair of performances of Elgar’s The Apostles, the first of
which is the work’s Canadian premiere. She’s retiring from conducting
Pax Christi Chorale, I understand, in order to devote even more focus
to her work as a composer. The appearance of this disc of her music is,
therefore, especially timely.
Almost all the music on the disc is for choir but I’ll deal first with
the two exceptions. Canterbury and When You Are Old
are solo songs, sung here by baritone Michael Robert-Broder accompanied
by Nicole Bellamy. Robert-Broder is a fine singer, his voice firm and
well-focussed. His diction is admirably clear. Canterbury is
a calm and rather lovely song setting a poem by the Canadian poet,
Douglas LePan (1914-1998) which refers to the martyrdom of Thomas
Beckett. The vocal line, supported by a delicate piano part, is very
melodious and the music displays a fine sensitivity to words. W B
Yeats’ When You Are Old is set to an easy, fluent vocal line;
it’s a very good response to the poem. On this evidence Stephanie
Martin is a fine song writer. I enjoyed the singing of Michael
Robert-Broder very much.
The most substantial offering on the disc is Winter Nights, a
set of five pieces for chorus accompanied by a small group of strings
and two percussionists. The first piece, Cold is the Night
sets an anonymous text for a cappella choir. I like the
clarity of the words and of the vocal lines in this performance. Loud
Rings the Frozen Earth, a setting of James Thomson (1700-1748), is
more vigorous though the pace relaxes for a calm tenor solo, sparingly
accompanied, midway through. In this piece I admire the way the
percussion section is used to colour the music. Christmas Cattle
sets a poem by the Canadian poet, Cori Martin (b 1959) which
imaginatively complements Thomas Hardy’s poem, The Oxen. Here
Stephanie Martin’s music is pleasingly warm and melodious and the
string accompaniment put me rather in mind of Vaughan Williams and
Finzi; I definitely sense an English accent here. Ring Out, Wild
Bells sets Tennyson’s famous New Year lines for unaccompanied
chorus. For the most part the music is energetic and the singing of Pax
Christi Chorale is lively. The music to which the final stanza, ‘Ring
in the valiant man and free’ is set is more reflective in tone. The
sequence ends with Now Winter Nights Enlarge in which lines
by Thomas Campion (1567-1620) are set. The full forces are deployed
here and the music is varied and attractive.
Among the individual pieces on the disc which I admired was Of the
Glorious City. This is a setting of a text by Julian of Norwich
for unaccompanied choir in which the writing seems to me to be not only
effective but also eloquent. Rise Up My Love, which takes
words from the Song of Solomon, is calm and lyrical, the music
characterised by long, expansive phrases. The famous text God So
Loved the World is interesting in that the choir is not so much
accompanied but, rather, their music is decorated by a flute and an
oboe; this works very well. The programme ends with Now the Queen
of Seasons for which the choir is joined by brass quintet, timpani
and organ. This is an uplifting ending to the disc.
I like the music on this disc very much. It’s unfailingly attractive
and it’s clear that Stephanie Martin has an excellent understanding of
the human voice and of how voices come together in choirs. I’m sure
everything on this disc is enjoyable and rewarding to sing and Miss
Martin certainly communicates very well with her listeners. She also
evidences a discriminating eye for a text and fine empathy for the
words she chooses to set. Her well trained choir sings for her with
commitment.
The recording has clarity and is perfectly satisfactory. However, I got
no sense at all of the acoustic of the building and though the
performances were set down in a church there’s no evidence of the
natural resonance of the building. In fact, the sound gives the
impression that the recordings were made in a studio and the
performances are just a fraction too closely balanced, which is rather
a pity. While I’m glad to be able to hear the music clearly just a
little bit of distance on the sound could have imparted a pleasing
aura. However, despite this the recording is quite acceptable. All the
sung texts are included in the booklet but there’s not a great deal of
information about the music other than details of for whom some of the
pieces were written. It would have been nice if Stephanie Martin had
written some notes to introduce her music. I’m afraid I can’t tell you,
for instance, when any of the pieces were written though I suspect most
were penned in recent years.
I imagine that Stephanie Martin’s music is quite well known in choral
circles in North America; it deserves to be. I hope that this disc will
bring her music to the attention of more ensembles. I’m sure the
singers of Pax Christi Chorale will miss her leadership but if she has
more time to devote to composition that can only be a good thing.
John Quinn