Georg Schumann came 
                  from a family of musicians: his father was the town music director 
                  in Königstein, his grandfather was a Kantor and his brother 
                  Camillo was also a composer. Georg studied music with his father 
                  and grandfather before continuing at Dresden and at the Leipzig 
                  Conservatoire. A talented conductor and choir trainer, he settled 
                  in Berlin in 1900 where he became director of the Sing-Akademie. 
                  He found the choir extraordinarily musical and it learned music 
                  quickly. This gave an impetus to his composing and he wrote 
                  his first piece for them, Drei geistliche Lieder in 1902.
                In 1916 he was awarded 
                  an honorary doctorate by the Friedrich Wilhelm University. War 
                  and post-war chaos prevented him from writing a piece in response 
                  to the honour. Finally in 1921 he wrote the Five Chorale 
                  Motets, Op. 71, which were first performed by the Berliner 
                  Sing-Akademie in 1922.
                The motets are well 
                  wrought pieces, firmly in the tradition of Bach, Mendelssohn 
                  and Brahms. But they are also rooted in the 20th 
                  century, though the tradition to which Schumann belonged is 
                  the conservative one. Schumann’s music is closer to Reger and 
                  Pfitzner than it is to Strauss, Berg or Schoenberg.
                Schumann’s chorale-based 
                  motets are not slavish followers of the past. His harmonisations 
                  of the chorale melody are often quite idiomatic. After a statement 
                  of the chorale he transforms the theme almost beyond recognition, 
                  firmly placing motifs in modern harmonic relationships. He was 
                  equally free with the words, adjusting texts to suit his own 
                  purposes.
                The first motet 
                  in the set is based on a chorale by Nicolai. Schumann alternates 
                  the high and low voices to magical effect at the opening of 
                  the piece. By the middle of the piece, Schumann is getting quite 
                  harmonically adventurous and the chorale almost disappears. 
                  The following two motets are very similar in construction and 
                  sound-world. Only in the fourth motet, “Wachet auf”, does he 
                  vary the structure, by introducing first organ accompaniment 
                  in the second verse and brass accompaniment in the third. The 
                  result is very stirring and would certainly bear reviving.
                For the final motet 
                  of the group, Schumann reverts to an unaccompanied choir, but 
                  here they accompany two soprano soloists. The opening, with 
                  its soprano solo and high-voiced choir, as if coming from celestial 
                  heights, is quite magical.
                Schumann’s next 
                  group of choral pieces were written in 1932 and first performed 
                  in 1934 again by the Sing-Akademie. The Three Chorale Motets, 
                  Op. 75 are again structured along the lines of the earlier 
                  pieces. Despite their late date, they remain firmly in the world 
                  of Wagner and Liszt. Like the earlier motets, one is rather 
                  more festal and uses an accompaniment of horns, trombones, tuba 
                  and timpani.
                These are well-wrought, 
                  symphonic-scale pieces. The longest motets last over eleven 
                  minutes and the shortest is nearly six minutes long. They would 
                  make strong items in a mixed choral programme and sound as if 
                  they are rewarding to sing. In fact, I have a sneaking suspicion 
                  that they are probably as much fun to sing as to listen to … 
                  possibly more so.
                The Purcell Singers 
                  under their conductor Mark Ford have already recorded a disc 
                  of Schumann’s earlier motets for ASV. This disc of the later 
                  pieces complements that neatly. In his Gramophone review of 
                  the ASV disc, Malcolm Riley described the disc as ‘revelatory’.
                The choir make a 
                  warm, well-blended sound and respond well to Schumann’s luxuriant 
                  textures. As recorded here, they use a big, vibrato-laden sound 
                  which does not always work well with Schumann’s chromaticism. 
                  When Schumann’s textures get complex I would sometimes have 
                  liked a greater sense of line and clarity of texture rather 
                  than the suave and resolved choral sound produced here. There 
                  are odd moments of raw tone in the tenors and sopranos, but 
                  not enough to disturb.
                These are fine performances 
                  of well-crafted music. Anyone interested in the byways of German 
                  neo-Romantic composers in the 20th century would 
                  be well advised to try this disc. 
                Robert Hugill