To a certain extent, 
                this release is the choral equivalent 
                of several earlier discs of French organ 
                music from Lammas. It explores some 
                little-known aspects of mostly 20th 
                century French sacred music. All choral 
                works here are for treble or female 
                voices, with the exception of In 
                Paradisum from Duruflé’s 
                beautiful Requiem Op.9 
                in which the girls receive support from 
                a select group of gentlemen. 
              
 
              
Jean Langlais has the 
                lion’s share, since he is represented 
                by his Missa in Simplicitate 
                from 1953 and five motets (composed 
                between 1932 and 1942) as well as by 
                a movement from his Triptyque 
                for organ, composed in 1956 and dedicated 
                to Duruflé. Missa in Simplicitate 
                is, appropriately enough, fairly straightforward 
                but, by no means, as simple as its title 
                might suggest. Langlais was a supreme 
                craftsman and artist who always managed 
                to be his own self in whatever medium 
                he chose to compose. So, his Mass has 
                its tricky bits, but is on the whole 
                fairly direct in idiom and expression, 
                the music being often modally inflected, 
                but not without harmonic surprises either. 
                The Five Motets, written 
                at various periods between 1932 and 
                1942, are equally straightforward, since 
                they were all composed for two equal 
                voices and organ or harmonium, and designed 
                so as to be sung by less experienced 
                parish choirs. As already mentioned, 
                Mélodie is the 
                first movement of Langlais’s Triptyque 
                dedicated to Duruflé, and a short 
                piece that perfectly fits within the 
                context of this release En Prière. 
              
 
              
Jehan Alain’s tragic 
                and untimely death in 1940 was one of 
                the great losses for French music, 
                for he was a prodigiously gifted and 
                personal composer whose extant output 
                is much more than merely promising. 
                Some of his organ works, such as Litanies, 
                Trois Danses and Deux 
                Danses à Agni Yavishta, 
                are now organ classics, although they 
                may not still be heard and recorded 
                as often as they undoubtedly deserve. 
                His choral music may be less familiar, 
                so that the present performances of 
                O Quam Suavis Est (no 
                date given) and of the Ave Maria 
                written in memory of his young sister 
                Marie-Odile who died in a mountain accident 
                at a quite early age, are most welcome 
                additions to his discography. 
              
 
              
Duruflé is represented 
                by his short Fugue sur le thème 
                du Carillon des heures de la Cathédrale 
                de Soissons ("a long title 
                for a short piece", as Rubbra once 
                wrote to me when asked about his A 
                Tribute Op.56, originally titled 
                Introduction and Danza alla Fuga), 
                an occasional piece, but superbly crafted 
                and brilliantly effective; and two excerpts 
                from the Requiem, viz. the deeply moving 
                Pie Jesu with its cello obbligato 
                and the concluding In Paradisum. 
              
 
              
Fauré is present 
                too with two different and equally fine 
                settings of Ave Maria as well 
                as a rarity, En Prière, 
                which gives this collection its collective 
                title. Caplet’s Sanctus and Benedictus 
                are in fact two sections from his beautifully 
                moving Messe à trois voix 
                "des petits de Saint-Eustache-la-Forêt" 
                (1919/20), a missa brevis in 
                all but the name, i.e. without the Credo 
                but ending with a setting of O Salutaris 
                Hostia. (A complete recording of 
                Messe à trois voix 
                is available on Accord 465 813-2, a 
                very fine collection of vocal works 
                by the much underrated André 
                Caplet well worth seeking.) 
              
 
              
All choral items receive 
                beautifully poised readings, and are 
                all well recorded; and this release, 
                as a whole, is one of the finest I have 
                heard from this label so far. A bit 
                short in terms of total playing time 
                (could Langlais’ Triptyque 
                not have been included here for good 
                measure, although the other movements 
                probably do not fit with this release’s 
                title); but this is really not enough 
                to deter anyone from enjoying the superb 
                singing on display here. 
              
 
              
Hubert Culot