Live community musical 
                groups are the life-blood of music. 
                They provide the necessary connection 
                that brings so much music to the masses 
                and give an outlet to many fine musicians 
                who have decided for some reason to 
                remain as amateurs. They introduce many 
                of the young to traditional musical 
                forms. Without these groups, there is 
                little doubt that traditional and classical 
                musical literature would be a rapidly 
                dying art form. 
              
 
              
The Betws-yn-Rhos Male 
                Voice Choir is a fine example of the 
                traditional male choir. It is a community 
                choir that holds a large number of concerts 
                for charitable causes, and performs 
                many of their works in Welsh, upholding 
                yet another tradition and keeping history 
                alive and vital. It is evident from 
                the recording that they are a hard-working 
                and well-meaning group of dedicated 
                musicians. The soloists are quite good, 
                the arrangements are well done, and 
                the selections are well suited to the 
                choir. 
              
 
              
Unfortunately, this 
                album simply cannot bring forth the 
                energy and passion that a live performance 
                by a community group often brings. Alas, 
                when given repeated listening, a recording 
                of this kind exposes the weaknesses 
                in the group far more than highlighting 
                strengths. The use of electronic keyboards 
                to emulate string sections may be totally 
                acceptable in a live performance but 
                is sorely lacking in the context of 
                a recording. The gusto and vigor that 
                powers a group like this in live performance 
                also distracts on recording, as the 
                intonation suffers when the stronger 
                singers try to lead the weaker by simply 
                adding volume. 
              
 
              
Also, unfortunately, 
                the room-acoustics of a recording studio 
                do not allow for the natural reverb 
                that a simple piano accompaniment needs. 
                The piano too frequently sounds choppy 
                and stylistically broken. This is the 
                mark of an accompanist accustomed to 
                performance halls where the ringing 
                hall or background crowd noise demands 
                an emphatic marcato style so that both 
                the choir and listeners are able to 
                get the beat and pitch. Additionally 
                the room will normally color the pianist’s 
                staccato styling giving it a breadth 
                that is lacking in this type of recording. 
              
 
              
Additionally, it seems 
                that the microphones were set in the 
                studio without a lot of room for acoustic 
                blending. All the signs are that the 
                recording engineer opted for a large 
                number of microphones on very few singers 
                rather than a few room microphones. 
                While that is the preferred method for 
                most instrumental groups, aside from 
                symphonic strings, it is rarely optimal 
                for voices. This approach again highlights 
                the shortcomings of the weaker singers 
                rather than the strengths of the choir. 
              
 
              
This is the type of 
                album that you really want to like, 
                as the group deserves support. Unfortunately, 
                it is normally a tie to an emotionally 
                gripping performance which the listener 
                must be present for if they are to overlook 
                the technical shortcomings of the group. 
                In live performance it easy to forgive 
                intonation problems and limited funds 
                for instrumentalists. On a recording, 
                fairly or not, the performance standards 
                must be higher, the equipment better. 
                If you have a connection to this group, 
                or have fond memories either of Wales 
                or of another similar choir of male 
                choristers, you should support this 
                group with your purchase. If you are 
                interested in seeing just how far an 
                amateur choir can go, this will give 
                you a solid idea. If you want to understand 
                or support the traditions of community 
                music groups, buying this album would 
                be a good place to start. However, if 
                you are looking for a truly professional 
                recording then this album will disappoint, 
                and no matter how much I want to like 
                this group, I don’t feel that I can 
                rate this recording as better than average. 
                I really wish that I could. 
              
 
              
Patrick Gary