Alan HOVHANESS (1911-2000)     
 From the Ends of the Earth  
 Cantate Domino, Op. 385 (1984) [7:26]
 Immortality, Op. 134 (undated) [2:43]
 Four Motets, Op. 87 (1951)
 No. 2 Unto Thee, O God [1:36]         
 Triptych: Ave Maria, Op. 100, No. 1a (1952) [3:30]
 A Simple Mass, Op. 282 (1975) [25:48]        
 From the Ends of the Earth, Op. 187 (1951, rev. 1960) [4:49]         
 Three Motets, Op. 259 (1972)
 No. 1 Peace Be Multiplied [2:58]  
 No. 2 God Be Merciful Unto Us [5:27]  
 No. 3 Wisdom [2:23]
 Hear My Prayer, O Lord, Op. 149 (1936/1959) [3:47]         
 I Will Rejoice in the Lord, Op. 42 (undated) [6:32]  
 Four Motets, Op. 87  
 No. 1 Why Hast Thou Cast Us Off [2:57]     
 The God of Glory Thundereth, Op. 140 (1935, rev 1960) [4:41]      
 O Lord God of Hosts, Op. 27 (undated) [4:51]
 David Chalmers, James E. Jordan, Jr. (organ)
Lydia Ingwersen, Stephen 
		Velie (oboe), Marianne Wierzbinski, Daniel Pfeiffer (French horn) & 
		Seana Shannon (harp) 
 Glorić Dei Cantores/Elizabeth C. Patterson
 rec. 2011, Church of the Transfiguration, Orleans, USA
 Reviewed as a stereo DSD64 download from
    
        NativeDSD
    
 Pdf booklet includes sung texts in English
 GLORIĆ DEI CANTORES GDCD052 SACD
    [75:28]
	It’s been a while since I last
    
        reviewed
    
    any music by the Armenian-American composer Alan Hovhaness, so when I came
    across this release I decided to put that right. These choral pieces are
    all new to me, as are the 40-voice Glorić Dei Cantores and their conductor
    Elizabeth C. Patterson. That said, my colleagues were impressed with the
    group’s other albums – see links at the end of this review – which
    certainly whetted my appetite for this one. Then again, the standard of
    choral singing in the US is so very high these days; witness Charles
    Bruffy’s Phoenix and Kansas singers in
    
        Grechaninov
    
    and
    
        Rachmaninov,
    and Craig Hella Johnson’s Conspirare in
    
        The Sacred Spirit of Russia.
    
 
This album gets off to a splendid start, with the incisive, spirit-lifting    Cantate Domino. The organ accompaniment is warm, weighty and, in
    keeping with the up-tempo nature of the piece, surprisingly nimble. The
    writing, like the singing, is direct and unfussy, which is the composer’s
default position. That’s a strength, not a failing, as the ensuing    Immortality, with Kathy Schuman’s ethereal solo and the choir’s
ringing ‘Hallelujahs’, so amply demonstrates. As for    Unto Thee, O God, the second of the Four Motets, it’s
distilled delight. What a lovely, rich tone this choir has, the    Ave Maria haloed by another Schuman solo, plus harp, oboes and
    French horns.
 
    This is singing and playing from the heart, and Steve Colby’s expansive,
    naturally balanced recording captures it all to perfection. The quietly
    pealing organ prelude at the start of A Simple Mass picks up some
    noise from the instrument, but such is the sense of deep communion it
    matters not a jot. Goodness, this is the composer as I’ve never heard him
    before, and I suspect others will be just as captivated – as moved –  as I
    was by the artless, open-hearted nature of the piece. The Credo is
    deeply felt, and the long-breathed ‘Amens’ are superbly controlled and
    blended. Remarkably, the Mass never stoops to the formulaic or
    anodyne, and that, perhaps, is the nicest surprise of all.
 
    I daresay the grateful acoustic of the Church of the Transfiguration in
    Orleans, Massachusetts – the choir’s home turf – has a significant part to
    play in the success of this album; it’s not a cavernous space with a
    muddying echo, so detail and nuance are never lost. More important, there’s
    an intimacy here that’s entirely right for music that speaks from soul to
    soul. As for the well-rounded organ – the Stygian pedals thrilling in the
    title piece, From the Ends of the Earth – it’s a perfectly scaled
    presence throughout. And I can’t fault the conductor, who shows impeccable
    judgment and unfailing musicality from start to finish.
 
    There must be some caveats, surely? No, none, the second half of this
    programme as clear and communicative as the first. The Three Motets,
    with alto Phoenix Marcela Catlin a warmly expressive soloist, are something
    of a palate cleanser, adding to the sense that this is a carefully planned
    and varied selection designed to show composer and performers at their
best. After that, Hear My Prayer, O Lord and    I Will Rejoice in the Lord have a deep-chested Eastern Orthodox
flavour that makes for a darkly stirring contrast. As for    The God of Glory Thundereth and O Lord God of Hosts, they’re
    as direct and disarming as anything that’s gone before.
 
    Really, this is music of unexpected range and quality, not at all what one
    might expect from the composer of that lid- and roof-lifting spectacular,
the Mount St Helens Symphony. In short,    From the Ends of the Earth is one of the finest choral
    recordings I’ve heard since the Tyberg Masses, made with the South 
	Dakota Chorale (Pentatone). That album, also available from
    
        NativeDSD,
    was one of my top picks for 2016, which tells you something about the
    musical and technical prowess on show here.
 
    Be sore amazed; I certainly was.
 
    Dan Morgan
 
	
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