This recording is the 
                culmination of a four-year association 
                between Gabriel Jackson and the choir 
                and conductor of St Mary’s. Matthew 
                Owens has succeeded in placing contemporary 
                music at the heart of the cathedral’s 
                musical life, thus assuring an almost 
                unique status for his choir as the germination 
                point for new Anglican music – an artistic 
                position which cannot be too greatly 
                applauded. 
              
 
              
The Edinburgh Mass 
                immediately invites comparison with 
                Arvo Pärt’s ‘Berliner Messe’, not 
                only on the strength of the title, but 
                also in the shortened Mass text used. 
                Where Pärt has a whole chamber 
                orchestra with which to support his 
                voices, Jackson uses the choir alone, 
                but both works share an economy and 
                conciseness aimed at intensifying the 
                directness of the Mass texts. In fact, 
                a more useful stylistic comparison throughout 
                this disc is with the choral work of 
                Poulenc, and there are plenty of moments 
                which remind me of the ‘Messe’ and the 
                Motets of that great Frenchman. While 
                Jackson’s compositional voice is distinctive, 
                it is hard not to pick out the eclectic 
                fragments of (for instance) Howells, 
                Tippett, possibly Duruflé or 
                Fauré, and indeed Pärt which 
                crop up occasionally like the currants 
                in a hot-crossed bun. This is not really 
                a strong criticism. It is a considerable 
                challenge to create really new music 
                in what is after all an extremely well-trodden 
                and closely frame-worked idiom. After 
                listening carefully to Jackson’s music 
                for a while now I have come to respect 
                his achievement more and more. 
              
 
              
The choir is nicely 
                recorded here, and, aside from one rather 
                pinched voice in the trebles which spoils 
                the homogeny of the sound at some critical 
                moments, is safely in tune, with good 
                ensemble, dynamics and balance. Katy 
                Thompson is the treble given solos in 
                a number of these pieces, and while 
                the vocal line soars cleanly over atmospheric 
                organ or choral moments her intonation 
                isn’t always completely secure – sometimes 
                falling just short of the note, as in 
                the beginning of Ane Sang. The 
                Precentor parts in Preces, 
                Responses and Dismissal, 
                are taken by The Revd Canon Peter Allen. 
                I hate to seem flippant when it comes 
                to such sensitively serious work as 
                this, but his voice reminds me of Thermian 
                Commander Mathesar from that film ‘Galaxy 
                Quest’ – or maybe I should just go to 
                church more often. 
              
 
              
This is new religious 
                music of the highest order. It is unpretentious, 
                open and honest, and with just enough 
                extra harmonic interest to give the 
                listener a frisson of relief 
                from the conventions and traditions 
                which are the backbone of, or which 
                can be the straitjacket for this kind 
                of music. The simplest ideas are often 
                the best, and I particularly like the 
                surprise upward semitone shift in the 
                Truro Service pieces. 
              
 
              
Personal taste plays 
                a big role in approaching such a release. 
                Since becoming ‘European’ I have been 
                able to look a little more objectively 
                at the Englishness of much of my earlier 
                musical education. My first real composition 
                teacher was Christopher Brown, whose 
                choral work is equally rooted in the 
                English tradition. Like change-ringing, 
                there is something unique about British 
                choral music which makes it instantly 
                recognisable as such, and those who 
                love sounds which can trace their ancestry 
                back through Howells, Purcell, Elizabethan 
                and even Medieval work from within the 
                shores of the British Isles will be 
                refreshed and fortified by the music 
                on this disc. 
              
Dominy Clements