I’m not a big choral music person. I don’t
know the first thing about it. Actually, that’s not true: the first
thing about it is that people sing. There are a few more factoids that have
made their way into my brain. The most important is that sometimes choral
music sounds very good.
The samples for this disc sounded very, very good indeed. So I took the plunge
and yes indeed was hooked from the very first track. Gunnar Idenstam has overlaid
a traditional Estonian hymn with a funky organ passacaglia that sounds straight
from 1970s fusion jazz. The result is a delight which I can only describe
as “kick-ass”. Apologies that that’s not typical reviewer-speak.
On the other hand, the track-five minutes of continuous hymnal crescendo over
the organ’s groovy figure-just plain kicks butt.
There are so many highlights I can hardly keep them straight. Rossini, Grieg,
and Milhaud show up at their very best, and Cyrillus Kreek, a 20
th
century Estonian composer, evokes the plaintive harmonies of centuries earlier.
The work was written under occupation in 1944. Andres Lemba’s rapid-fire
“Gloria”, where voices speak over each other at conversation speed
- here’s my lack of expertise coming through- is a buoyant miniature
executed with consummate skill. The Hungarian György Orbán, captivated
by some verse about the Devil’s trickery, has built a quick-moving work
strongly reminiscent of mature Janacek - think of his choral masterpiece
The
70,000. Franz Biebl’s “Ave Maria” is so beautiful, so
generous to the ear, that its author must be my favourite musician whose last
name starts with “Bieb”.
Bob Chilcott’s
Newton’s Amazing Grace is one of two English-language
selections, and maybe it’s because I understood the words but I detected
some weakness here. Chilcott leans on lots of accompanying vocals like “hum
hum” and “ha ha”, but more worryingly, he observes line
breaks in ways that bend the meanings of the sentences. Some of these are
probably deliberate “I skippered ships that did more than bruise [long
pause] the face of the Atlantic.” That’s an unsubtle allusion
to the slave trade which will be explicitly mentioned later in the verse.
There you have it the only thing I can complain about with this fabulous CD.
Orphei Drängar is a 160-year-old choir with a warm sound and a seeming
inability to ever sound ugly, no matter the language they’re singing.
Cecilia Rydinger Alin proves an expert hand in conducting all this little-known
music. Recorded sound, in a church is quite simply flawless. The booklet notes
include all the sung texts and English translations. Even a clueless choral
music neophyte like me is alternately thrilled by and in awe of the music
on this disc. Narrowing down my Recording of the Year list just got a lot
harder.
My review copy was downloaded via
eClassical
in fabulous sound, and came with a PDF of the booklet.
Brian Reinhart
I’m no choral music lover, but narrowing down my Recording of the Year
list just got a lot harder.