CHRISTMAS 2010
DOWNLOAD SUPPLEMENT
Brian Wilson
A few seasonal offerings slipped through the net of my December
Download Roundup. Most of the downloads here from Passionato
were subject to a 15% Christmas Music discount at the time of
writing.
A Festival of Lessons and Carols (1958)
Once in Royal David’s City;
Bidding Prayer;
Invitatory from J.S. BACH Christmas
Oratorio;
First Lessson;
Adam lay y-bounden;
Second Lesson;
I saw three ships;
Third Lesson;
Gabriel’s Message;
God rest ye merry gentlemen;
Sussex Carol;
Fourth Lesson;
In dulci jubilo;
Fifth Lesson;
Away in a manger;
While shepherds watched;
Sixth Lesson;
O come, all ye faithful;
Seventh Lesson;
Hark, the herald angels sing.
Simon Preston (organ); King’s College Choir, Cambridge/David
Willcocks - rec. 22-24 December, 1958. ADD.
HIGH DEFINITON TAPE TRANSFERS HDCD159 [50:18] - from HDTT
(CD, DVD and lossless download)
This
comes from early in David Willcocks’ reign at King’s, his second
year in post, I believe, a vintage period, which makes it well
deserving of reissue. For those who want more, after hearing
this appetite-whetter, the 2-CD Decca collection of King’s Christmas
recordings from Willcocks’ time, some from as long ago as 1959
(Noël 444 848-2, around £7 in the UK) is still
available. From a later period, there’s a Classics for Pleasure
album, Carols from Kings, again with Willcocks at the
helm, available for a mere £3.49 as a download from HMV
Digital - here.
Start with the wonderfully transferred HDTT programme, however,
first.
A commentator on the HDTT website suspects that the programme
has been cut to fit on one CD, but the complete Nine Lessons
and Carols would not have fit on a 1958 LP - even now the
programme regularly is slightly too long to fit on a single
CD - and truncation had to be the order of the day. The 7-lesson
truncation was established when Argo recorded the service under
the direction of Boris Ord in 1953 (RG39 - perhaps HDTT or Beulah
will revive that for next Christmas?).
The same writer wonders at the lack of newly-commissioned music,
but that was not a feature of the service in 1958. What is unusual
is the inclusion of an excerpt from Bach’s Christmas Oratorio
as the Invitatory, a practice which I don’t recall having been
repeated - perhaps as an undergraduate at the older university
in the early 1960s, I wasn’t paying attention to what was happening
over in the fastnesses of the East Anglian marshes.
This is early-ish Decca stereo and King’s College Chapel is
a notoriously difficult place to record - the BBC transmitted
the service in mono only for at least a decade after the advent
of stereo radio - but HDTT have done their usual wonders with
the sound, as they did with the Ansermet recording of Bizet,
a Decca recording of much the same vintage, which impressed
Dan Morgan and myself so much that I made it one of my six choices
of 2010.
Into This World This Day Did Come. Carols Contemporary &
Medieval
Diana BURRELL (b. 1948) Creator
of the Stars of Night *[5:52]
Judith BINGHAM (b. 1952) Annunciation*
[6:19]
Stuart MACRAE (b. 1976) Adam
lay y-bounden* [5:02]
13th century English Edi beo thu [3:11]
Richard CAUSTON (b. 1971)
Cradle Song* [2:54]
Francis POTT (b. 1957) That
yongë child* [4:53]
John DUNSTAPLE (c. 1390-1453)
Quam Pulchra es [2:12]
Gabriel JACKSON (b. 1962) Salus
æterna* [2:54]
16th century English Salvator mundi Domine [3:57]
Howard SKEMPTON (b. 1947) To
Bethlehem did they go [2:25]
Judith BINGHAM
God would be born in thee [6:06]
John REDFORD (d. 1547) Tui
sunt cæli [3:44]
Howard SKEMPTON Into this
world, this day did come* [2:50]
William SWEENEY (b. 1950) The
Innumerable Christ [3:24]
12th century English Verbum Patris umanatur [1:22]
Diana BURRELL Christo
paremus cantica [2:58]
Robin HOLLOWAY (b. 1942) Christmas
Carol [6:24]
15th century English Nowell sing we [2:51]
Judith BINGHAM Incarnation
with shepherds dancing* [3:58]
Gabriel JACKSON Nowell sing
we [2:00]
Choir of Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge/Geoffrey Webber/David
Ballantyne, Matthew Fletcher & Geoffrey Webber (organ)
rec. 3-5 July 2009, St Anne’s Cathedral, Belfast. DDD
*First recording
DELPHIAN DCD34075 [75:28] –
from classicsonline.com
and eMusic
(mp3) and theclassicalshop.net
(mp3 and lossless)/stream from Naxos Music Library
This
download qualifies for all the praise which John Quinn heaped
on the parent CD, apart from the lack of the booklet of texts
and notes: ‘This is one of the most original and enterprising
Christmas discs to have come my way in a long time. Intelligently
planned and superbly executed it can be recommended most warmly
to all choral music collectors who have an enquiring ear.’
(See full review). With
the CD currently available on special offer for £8.50
from our partners at MDT, downloading becomes a less economical
proposition: classicsonline.com have it for £7.99, eMusic
for £8.40 (both mp3), and theclassicalshop.net have it
in mp3 at £7.99 and lossless sound at £9.99. Subscribers
can listen via the Naxos Music Library.
The Cherry Tree - Songs, Carols & Ballads for Christmas
Prophetarum presignata [1:29]
Nowel syng we bothe al and som [2:59]
Alma redemptoris mater [4:02]
The Shepherd’s Star [2:21]
Newell - Tydings trew [3:58]
Mervele noght Iosep [6:19]
Synge we to this mery cumpane [3:15]
Qui creavit celum [4:21]
A Virgin Unspotted [2:34]
Now may we syngyn [2:45]
Lullay my child - This ender nithgt [3:46]
Star in the East [3:15]
Veni redemptor gencium [5:29]
The Cherry Tree Carol [3:10]
Salve mater misericodie [1:30]
Hail Mary ful of grace [4:28]
William BILLINGS (1746-1800)
Bethlehem [2:49]
Anonymous 4
HARMONIA MUNDI USA HMU807453 [58:40] – from eMusic
and hmvdigital.com
(both mp3)
This
is the latest of several Christmas offerings from Anonymous
4 over the years. It’s almost a cliché now to remark
how much variety their different combinations of four voices
or fewer can create, this time in a combination of late-medieval
and renaissance music combined with American folk distillations
of the repertoire. Often the American tradition has preserved
the spirit of the music more truthfully than any scholarly research
- remember that some of the most ‘authentic’ versions
of British ballads were recorded in the Appalachian communities.
The programme ends with a fuguing-tune by William Billings,
an early American composer whose music became something of a
Harmonia Mundi speciality, though only a sample is left in the
catalogue (Paul Hiller: a Portrait, HMX290 7126, budget price).
The recording is excellent. I took some tracks from each of
the named sources. All those from HMV Digital are at 320kb/s,
as are fewer than half those from eMusic, with the rest as low
as 224kb/s.
Cristofaro CARESANA (c.1640-1709)
Per la nascità del verbo
La Caccia del Toro [14:34]
La Tarantella (1673) [18:19]
La Pastorale (1670) [14:26]
Orazio GIACCIO
(c.1590-c.1660) Pastorale sulla ciaccona (1645)
[4:59]
Bernardo STORACE (fl.1664) Passagagli
con partite pastorali (1664) [5:15]
Cristofaro CARESANA (c.1640-1709)
La Vittoria dell' Infante (1683) [9:07]
Roberta Invernezzi, Roberta Andalò (soprano), Daniela
Del Monaco (alto), Giuseppe De Vittorio, Rosario Totaro (tenor),
Furio Zanasi (bass), Cappella della Pietà de' Turchini
/ Antonio Florio - rec. March 1996, Sant'Erasmo Church, Castel
Sant'Elmo, Naples. DDD.
NAÏVE Voix Baroque OP30449 [66:47] - from classicsonline.com
(mp3)/stream from the Naxos Music Library.
This
recording, mostly of the theatrically religious music of the
Venetian-born Neapolitan composer Caresana, is a real rarity
and well worth investigating. No texts or notes with the download,
but Glyn Pursglove’s review – here
– will help put the music in context. Apart from the two opening
items, everything is labelled pastorale, relating to the shepherds’
part in the Christmas story or, loosely, to the Nativity in
general. The final track celebrates the victory of the Christ
child. As GPu writes, everything here is a miniature masterpiece.
With good mp3 sound, the classicsonline price of £4.99
is a steal. Subscribers to eMusic will find it for even less
there, at £2.52. Stream it from the Naxos Library at your
peril - it will make you want to buy it.
The new recording of Caresana’s l'Adorazione de'Maggi
and some of his other Christmas Canatas on Glossa GCD922601
(I Turchini/Antonio Florio, again) doesn’t seem to have found
its way on to download yet.
Machet die Tore weit - Baroque Christmas Cantatas
from Central Germany
Johann SCHELLE (1648-1701)
Machet die Tore weit [8:27]
Basilius PETRITZ (1647-1715)
Die Herrlichkeit des Herrn [13:00]
Philipp Heinrich ERLEBACH (1657-1714)
Fürchtet euch nicht [9:58]
Christian August JACOBI (1688-
after 1725) Also hat Gott die Welt geliebet [10:23]
Christian LIEBE (1654-1708)
O Heiland aller Welt [7:39]
Johann Ernst BESSEL (1654-1732)
Komm, du schöne Freudenkrone [8:05]
Birte Kulawik, Dorothea Wagner (sopranos); David Erler (contralto);
Hans Jörg Mammel (tenor); Matthias Lutze (bass)
Sächsisches Vocalensemble; Batzdorfer Hofkapelle/Matthias
Jung
rec. Lukaskirche, Dresden, 8-11 June 2007. DDD
CPO 777 332-2 [57:55] – from Passionato.com
(mp3 and lossless) or classicsonline.com
(mp3)/stream from Naxos Music Library.
As
John Quinn wrote of the parent CD: ‘This unfamiliar music
is most enjoyable and it’s very well served by these sparkling
performances.’ (See review). This
and the Carus CD below make for most attractive listening, though
they are both rather short value. The lossless download is excellent
and I have no reason to doubt that the mp3 is, too. If you only
want mp3, classicsonline charge only £4.99.
Georg Philipp TELEMANN (1681-1767)
Machet die Tore weit - Cantatas for Advent and Christmas
Machet die Tore weit (I), sacred cantata for chorus,
2 oboes, strings & continuo, TWV 1:1074 [16:49]
Nun komm der Heiden Heiland (I), sacred cantata for chorus,
2 oboes, 2 cornets, timpani, strings & continuo, TWV 1:1174
[9:19]
In dulci jubilo, sacred cantata for chorus, 2 oboes,
horn, strings & continuo, TWV 1:939 [13:59]
Barbara Ullrich (soprano); Heidi Rieß (alto); Aldo Baldin,
Oly Pfaff (tenors); Bruce Abel (bass); Motettenchor Stuttgart;
Ensemble 76 Stuttgart/Günter Graulich. - rec. 1979. ADD.
CARUS 83.133 [40:07] – from Passionato.com
(mp3 and lossless)
Despite
Passionato’s given recording date of ‘January 1992’,
Carus actually admit to 1979 on the CD insert. The recording
is, especially in lossless format, nevertheless, worthy of the
performances, and they of the music. The only drawback is the
short playing time. This and the previous CPO album remind us
that it was the baroque composers of the generation just before
Bach that effectively developed Christmas music, allowing him
to build on and excel their achievement.
Antonio VIVALDI (1678-1741)
Concerti Grossi, Op.3/1-12, L'Estro armonico [95:28]
Concerti Grossi, Op.4/1-12, La Stravaganza [110:42]
Concerti Grossi, Op.8/1-12, Il Cimento dell'armonia e dell'invenzione
(including Nos.1-4, I Quattro Stagioni, The Four
Seasons [110:18]
Concerti Grossi, Op.9/1-12, La Cetra [110:05]
Christopher Hogwood - rec. 1980-1987. DDD.
DECCA 475 7693 [6:55:14] – from Passionato.com
(mp3)
Arguably,
Winter, the fourth of Vivaldi’s Seasons, is just
as Christmas-y as Leroy Anderson’s Sleigh Ride or Steve
Nelson’s Frosty the Snowman in the Grimethorpe recording
(below).
I've recently been reviewing the Virgin reissue of Fabio Biondi’s
recordings of Vivaldi’s Op.3 and Op.9 - excellent value in a
4-CD box (6484082, around £14.50 in the UK) - but for
those who wish to explore a little further, or find Biondi’s
version of authenticity just a little too enthusiastic, this
Passionato download at £25.99 is even better value. There
are moments when Hogwood sounds a little tame beside Biondi
- his Winter, Op.8/4, is slightly too mild - but, with
excellent performances of Op.4 and Op.9, the two unjustly neglected
sets among Vivaldi’s named concertos, in addition to the Op.3
and Op.8 on the Biondi set, the Decca collection merits a strong
recommendation, especially as the parent discs are apparently
deleted.
Passionato also have just the Four Seasons from the Hogwood
set – the only part of the collection to survive on CD – but
that’s really poor value. If the Seasons are all
you want, download Trevor Pinnock (period instruments, 474 6162
– from Passionato.com)
or Neville Marriner (modern instruments, 475 7531 – from Passionato.com),
also from Decca, both of which come with added concertos, or
buy the recent dal Segno mid-price reissue of The Seasons
(Andrew Parrott) plus Andrew Manze in three concertos from la
Stravaganza (DSPRCD508).
Johann Sebastian BACH
(1685-1750)
Cantatas Nos.111 Was mein Gott will (Epiphany 3, 1725)
[22:10]; 140 Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme (last Sunday
before Advent, 1731) [32:13] and 110 Gott ist mein König
(Council election, 1708) [19:33]
Theo Adam; Grummer; Höffgen; Kastner; Thomanerchcor, Leipzig;
Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra/Kurt Thomas - rec. 1959/60. ADD.
BERLIN CLASSICS 009032BC[73:56] – from Passionato.com
(mp3 and lossless)
Cantatas Nos.140 Wachet aud, ruft uns die Stimme (last
Sunday before Advent, 1731) [24:35] and 147 Herz und Mut
und Tat und Leben (Visitation of the BVM, 1723) [28:05]
Michael Chance; Stephen Varcoe; Ruth Holton; Anthony Rolfe Johnson;
Monteverdi Choir; English Baroque Soloists/John Eliot Gardiner
– rec. 1990. DDD.
DEUTSCHE
GRAMMOPHON ARCHIV 463 5872 [52:40] – from Passionato.com
(mp3)
John
Quinn recently welcomed Gardiner’s 2000 version of Cantata
140 on SDG171 – see review.
I have no doubt that it’s at least the equal of the earlier
studio recording here, and I hope to make its acquaintance soon,
but it comes as part of a 2-CD package, whilst this Archiv download,
in good mp3 sound, is coupled on a single album with the even
better-known Cantata 147. (At least the section Jesus
bleibet meine Fruede, or ‘Jesu, joy of man’s desiring’
is better known). I don’t know how I could have left Wachet
auf out of my Christmas downloads in the December Roundup
or in last year’s Christmas supplement, especially as it’s my
wife’s absolute favourite of all the Bach cantatas.
I
couldn’t resist a reminder that enjoyable performances of Bach
cantatas are not the sole preserve of the period-instrument
movement, by including one of Berlin Classics’ revivals of Thomas’s
performances with forces from the Thomas Choir, the descendants
of Bach’s own choir, and the Leipzig Gewandhaus. It’s heavier
than Gardiner, as reflected in the much longer playing time,
but not impossibly so. Passionato also have Karl Richter’s recordings
of Advent and Christmas cantatas from much the same period (DGG
Archiv 439 3692, 4 CDs).
Johann Sebastian BACH Organ
Music
Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme, BWV645 [3:49]
Passacaglia in cminor, BWV582 [13:19]
Erbarm dich mein, o Herre Gott, BWV721 [4:36]
Piece d'Orgue, BWV572 [9:02]
O Mensch, bewein dein Sünde gross, BWV622 [5:15]
Toccata, Adagio and Fugue in C, BWV564 [5:35+4:05+8:01]
Dies sind die heil'gen zehn Gebot, BWV678 [5:41]
Prelude and Fugue in E flat, BWV552 [8:33+6:46]
David Hamilton (organ) - rec. February 2010, Canongate Kirk,
Edinburgh.
Download includes pdf booklet with organ specification.
DIVINE ART DDA5088 [75:34] - from theclassicalshop.net
(mp3 and lossless)
This
gets into the Christmas supplement by virtue of its overall
excellence - if you're looking for a single-disc introduction
to JSB’s organ music, this could well be it - and also because
it opens with the Advent chorale Wachet auf. The download
from theclassicalshop comes complete with the booklet of notes,
which includes the specification of the Canongate organ. David
Hamilton’s performances are fully the equal of those on his
earlier Divine Art recording of Buxtehude and the lossless sounds
is excellent. For those wishing to save £2 by purchasing
the mp3 (£7.99 instead of £9.99) I can report that
I have never been let down by mp3s from this site.
Nikolai RIMSKY-KORSAKOV
(1844-1908)
Overture: The Tsar’s Bride (1898) [6:32]
Suite: Pan Voyevode (1904) [23:11]
Suite: Christmas Eve (1895) [27:11]
Overture on Russian Themes (1866; rev. 1880) [11:53]
Suite: The Snow Maiden (1881) [13:08]
Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra/Kees Bakels
rec. November 2004, Dewan Philharmonik Petronas Hall, Kuala
Lumpur
BIS-CD-1577 [82:27] – from Passionato.com
(mp3 and lossless)
Previously
I've recommended Neeme Järvi’s 2-for-1 set of Rimsky’s
music, including the Christmas Eve and Snow Maiden
Suites (CHAN10369X - see December 2008 Roundup), but, if you
don’t want a double helping - good value as that set is - Kees
Bakels and the Malaysian PO offer an equally fine alternative
for this seasonal music, well recorded and presented in good
sound, especially the lossless version. It was on offer at a
25% reduction at the time of writing. As Terry Barfoot concludes,
‘this is an appealing and highly recommendable issue.’
(See review).
Both Järvi and Bakels offer performances worthy to be mentioned
in the same breath as the classic Decca/Ansermet versions, now
available from Australian Eloquence (480 0827 and 480
0081 – see review).
Don’t overlook the wonderful Opus Arte DVD of Tchaikovsky’s
Cherevichki, The Tsarina’s Slippers, from the 2009 Royal
Opera Hose Covent Garden production. Based on the same Gogol
story as Rimsky’s Christmas Eve, it’s a real Christmas treat.
(Opus Arte OA1037D)
Irving BERLIN (1888-1989) Berlin for Brass
Let Yourself Go [2:08]
Top Hat, White Tie and Tails [3:29]
Blue Skies [3:39]
(I’ll see you in) Cuba [2:30]
Alexander’s Ragtime Band [3:10]
What’ll I Do? [3:43]
Puttin’ on the Ritz [2:46]
Get Thee Behind Me, Satan [2:34]
Supper Time [4:33]
Listening [1:56]
Heat Wave [4:41
No Strings [2:50]
Lazy [3:09]
That International Rag [3:14]
They Say It’s Wonderful [3:30]
White Christmas [3:33]
Harlem on My Mind [3:14]
When I Lost You [2:34]
There’s No Business like Show Business [2:30]
Chestnut Brass Company
NAXOS 8.559123 [59:43] – from classisconline.com
or passionato.com
(both mp3)
What’s
this doing in a Christmas Roundup? It’s here by virtue of the
fact that it offers a more sympathetic version of White Christmas
than the Grimethorpe recording (below) and the fact that Irving
Berlin is entertaining at any time of the year. How about Blue
Skies and Heat Wave for making you feel warm - unless
you're in Australia, where it’s warm enough at Christmas. The
track information for the classicsonline version contains the
words ‘Berlin - Irving classical composer’. At first
I thought that was stretching the word ‘classical’
slightly but, on reflection, the epithet is as fully justified
for Berlin as it is for George Gershwin and ‘Duke’
Ellington, to both of whom I'd readily apply it.
This version of White Christmas is slower than the Grimethorpe
version, which is appropriate - the words are ‘dreaming
of a white Christmas’ after all - but this one takes a
bit too long to get underway and tries to be a little too clever
for my liking, though the rest of the programme is very enjoyable.
Both sites offer this in mp3 only - for once, there’s no lossless
flac from Passionato, but they did have the download on offer
at 25% reduction (£3.69) when I last checked. The recording
could do with a little more presence - you may find it benefits
from a higher volume setting - but that’s not a major problem.
Benjamin BRITTEN (1913-1976)
A Ceremony of Carols (1942) [22:04]
Elizabeth POSTON (1905-1987)
An English Day-Book [19:43]
Oliver Iredale SEARLE (b.1977)
On a Summer Night [4:03]
Stephen DEAZLEY (b.1969)
The Ears of Mr Tuer [3:09]
National Youth Choir of Scotland (NYCoS) Girls Choir/Christopher
Bell
Claire Jones (harp)
rec. Caird Hall, Dundee, 2-3 May 2010. DDD.
SIGNUM CLASSICS SIGCD228 [49:06] - from classicsonline.com(mp3)/stream
from Naxos Music Library.
This
is more for those who wish to explore the Elizabeth Poston coupling
than for those looking for the Britten: good as that is, there
are better versions at lower prices or more appropriately coupled.
My own favourite at the moment comes from The Sixteen, on Hodie
(Coro COR16004 – see last year’s Christmas
Downloads) where the Ceremony is coupled with other
Christmas music by 20th-century British composers,
or as part of a 3-CD set (A Christmas Collection, COR16054
– see December 2010 Download
Roundup).
I enjoyed the Poston but thought most of the music unmemorable
and, in any case, the claim that this is a work for the same
forces as the Ceremony of Carols is a little forced -
many of the individual works which form the English Day-Book
cycle were not originally composed with harp accompaniment in
mind. Try this first at the Naxos Music Library if possible.
The classicsonline download comes complete with the booklet
of notes and texts, also available to those who stream from
the Naxos Music Library.
Vytautas MIKINIS (b.1954)
Time is Endless
Dum medium silentium [4:37]
O sacrum convivium [4:55]
Pater noster [5:17]
Tenebrae factae sunt [4:26]
Neieik, saulala (Don’t leave me, sun) [6:16]
Seven ‘O’ Antiphons for Advent [19:04]
Oi šąla, šąla (Oh, it’s getting cold) [7:57]
O magnum mysterium [6:14]
Ave Maria II [3:34]
Salve regina [5:18]
Ave Maria III [3:39]
Time is endless [6:32]
The Choir of Royal Holloway/Rupert Gough - rec. St Alban’s Church,
Holborn, London, 7-9 January 2010. DDD
Booklet with notes, texts and translations included as pdf download.
HYPERION CDA67818 [77:57] - from Hyperion
(mp3 and lossless)
I've
sneaked this into the Christmas selection by virtue of its opening
with Dum medium silentium, the Introit for First Vespers
of the Sunday after Christmas and its also containing the Seven
Advent Antiphons (O sapientia, etc.) which pave the way
for the Nativity in the week preceding the feast. More to the
point, it was just too good to leave till the January Roundup:
the music of yet another Hyperion/Royal Holloway discovery,
the Lithuanian composer Vitautas Mikinis. Remember the
name: I'll be disappointed if we don’t hear much more of him
in years to come. No Jingle Bells here, just mainly quiet,
contemplative and always utterly approachable music, very sympathetically
sung and recorded.
A White Christmas with Grimethorpe
Irving BERLIN (arr. Mark FREEH)
White Christmas [2:56]
F. COOTES/H. GILLESPIE (arr.
Robin DEWHURST) Santa Claus is Coming to Town [3:09]
Felix BERNARD/Richard SMITH
(arr. Gordon LANGFORD) Winter Wonderland [2:59]
Leroy ANDERSON (arr. Ernest
TOMLINSON) Sleigh Ride [2:48]
Midge URE /Bob GELDOF (arr.
Derek BROADBENT) Do They Know It’s Christmas [3:21]
John D. MARKS (arr. Alan FERNIE)
Rudolf the Red-Nosed Reindeer [2:11]
Howard BLAKE (arr. Philip SPARKE)
Walking in the Air (from The Snowman) [4:28]
ZACAR / JAY (arr. John GOLLAND)
When a Child is Born [3:23]
Sergey PROKOFIEV (arr. Ray FARR)
Midnight Sleigh Ride (Troika) [2:34]
Goff RICHARDS
Christmas Piece [3:42]
John GOLLAND Dies Natalis,
Op. 86 [7:30]
John D. MARKS (arr. Robin DEWHURST)
Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree [3:06]
STRACHAN/PAUL/STEWART (arr.
Darrol BARRY) Mistletoe and Wine [3:52]
James CURNOW Christmas Triptych
[6:12]
Steve NELSON / Jack ROLLINS
(arr. Sandy SMITH) Frosty the Snowman [4:21]
Peter GRAHAM The Spirit
of Christmas [2:26]
SIMEONE/ONORATI/DAVIS (arr.
Philip SPARKE) The Little Drummer Boy [3:50]
Jester J. HAIRSTON (arr. Robin
DEWHURST) Mary’s Boy Child [4:10]
Stephen BULLA A Christmas
Suite [9:01]
Grimethorpe Colliery Band/Major Peter Parkes - rec.1997. DDD.
CHANDOS BRASS CHAN4550 [77:18] – from theclassicalshop.net
(mp3 and lossless)
This
is excellent value (£3.60 for mp3, £3.74 for lossless,
with 77 minutes playing time) but at first I thought that it
wasn’t quite what I was looking for. The playing is excellent
but the performance of the opening tracks is - or the arrangements
are - a little too ‘clever’ when I was hoping for
something with more of an oomph. You'll find that intermittently
- at the end of Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer, for example,
and the Prokofiev goes with a real swing in a jazzy arrangement,
after which most of the music goes swimmingly, with some spectacular
solos. Nobody could possibly un-sentimentalise Mistletoe
and Wine or stop it sticking to the teeth and the Grimethorpe
Band don’t even try. Those early tracks make this more for late-night
listening than for setting a party alight. The lossless download
sounds excellent.
In Praise of the Nativity of Our Lord
Chant: Troparion of the Nativity [00:58]
Anonymous: Kontakion of the Nativity [02:16]
D HRISTOV: O Gladsome Radiance
(Svete tihii) [02:48]
Kiril POPOV (b.1955) Exaltation
for the Nativity, for bass & chorus [02:36]
A GRECHANINOV: Voskliknitye
Gospodyevi (Make A Joyful Noise) [03:15]
I KOCHETOV: Christ is Born
- Obikhod (1st song), small litany [2:11]
Great Prokeimenon, Mode 8 [02:24]
D BORTNYANSKY: Sacred Concerto
No. 6 (‘Glory to God in the highest’) (Slava vo
vishnikh Bogu) [05:28]
Chant: As Many as Have Been Baptized [05:38]
Kiril POPOV: Iz Kanon
za Rozhdestvo Hristovo (from Canon for the Nativity), chant
[01:50]
Chant: Anti axion esti, sung at the Nativity [03:15]
Anonymous: Exapostilaria of the Nativity [01:25]
Kiril POPOV: In Praise of
the Nativity [5:01]
D HRISTOV: The Birth of
Christ [02:03]
Franz Xaver GRUBER: Stille
Nacht, heilige Nacht (Silent Night) [03:15]
Traditional: A New Joy Has Come, carol from Strandja
[02:35]
Traditional: Good Evening [2:16]
D HRISTOV: Christmas Bread
[0:50]
Traditional: Christmas visitors [1:06]
A BUKORESHTLIEV: Christmas
Carolers 01:36]
D BORTNYANSKY: Many Years
[2:01]
Bells [1:07]
Men’s Voices of Sveta Nedelya Cathedral Choir, Sofia/Kiril Popov
- rec. 2000. DDD
GEGA NEW GD108 [56:52] - from Passionato.com
(mp3)
And,
finally, for something different. Some knowledge of Greek and
Old Church Slavonic would help, but it’s not essential for enjoyment
of this recording of Russian Orthodox music for the Nativity
(January 6th.) with full-voiced singing and good recording.
The interpolation of Stille Nacht (in Russian, Emglish
and German) sounds decidedly out of context, but otherwise this
is a most recommendable download, at a snip of a price (£5.99),
encouraging me to try to find other recordings of Russian and
Bulgarian Orthodox music on this label.