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Willow Consort & Danny Purtell - The Road Home: Choral Music from America (2020) [Hi-Res]

Willow Consort & Danny Purtell - The Road Home: Choral Music from America (2020) [Hi-Res]
  • Title: The Road Home: Choral Music from America
  • Year Of Release: 2020
  • Label: Convivium Records
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: flac lossless / flac 24bits - 192.0kHz +Booklet
  • Total Time: 01:00:24
  • Total Size: 213 mb / 1.89 gb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist
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01. Deep River (Arr. G. Hancock)
02. Soar Away
03. I Am
04. The Road Home
05. Were You There (Arr. N. Luboff)
06. There Will Be Rest
07. 7 Last Words: No. 1, Father, Forgive Them
08. 7 Last Words: No. 2, Amen dico tibi
09. 7 Last Words: No. 3, Mulier, ecce filius tuus
10. 7 Last Words: No. 4, Eli, lama sabatani?
11. 7 Last Words: No. 5, I Thirst
12. 7 Last Words: No. 6, Consummatum est
13. 7 Last Words: No. 7, Father, into Thy Hands


Lesser-known gems of American choral music. Performed by Willow Consort, conducted by Danny Purtell. In recent years the choral music of America has become increasingly popular. ‘The Road Home’ presents a small survey of some of the lesser-known gems of the repertoire.

Programme notes: Gerre Hancock is most famous as Organist and Master of the choristers at Saint Thomas Church, New York. Hancock’s beautiful and harmonically rich arrangement of ‘Deep River’ has the true feel of an ebbing and flowing river. The spiritual itself offers advice to slaves who wish to escape from their masters by the river, which will wash away their scent.

Carter Sligh, based in Washington DC, sang with Willow Consort from 2014-15 whilst studying at The University of York. ‘Soar Away’ takes its inspiration from a style of singing known as ‘Sacred Harp’. The name derives from a tune book printed in shape notes. There are four shapes, each with a connected syllable, fa, sol, la and mi. These allowed non-music readers to learn the harmonies for full congregational singing. The idea behind ‘Soar Away’ is a group of singers in a church up in the mountains. Everything other than the theme directly lifted from the hymnbook is echoes, bouncing off the mountains.

‘I Am’, a setting of the poem ‘Do not stand at my grave and weep’, begins placidly. It takes the refrain of “I Am” as a mantra for existence. Dominick DiOrio’s use of a dramatic soprano solo is both a musical and theatrical choice. The soloist communicating from beyond death to those still alive. The act of “being” is here an act of defiance, with life triumphing over the grave.

‘Were You There’ is a tender and beautiful hymn that dwells on the crucifixion. In this luscious arrangement by Norman Luboff, the simple homophonic setting really allows the listener to focus on the words.

Frank Ticheli wrote ‘There Will Be Rest’ for friends whose child had died. It sets a hauntingly beautiful poem by Sara Teasdale, one of America’s greatest female poets. Teasdale took her own life at the age of just forty-eight. Ticheli writes in the front of the score ‘Many of her poems address the pain that tormented her spirit. But to the end she seemed to draw strength and hope from the stars and their permanent radiance’. ‘There Will Be Rest’, was one of her last poems. It is a perfect summary of her lifelong concern for the stars and their ancient promise of peace. By design, this choral setting captures the poem’s purity of spirit and delicate lyricism.

In conclusion: We have chosen to end the recording with Bern Herbolsheimer’s devastating setting of ‘Seven Last Words’. Willow Consort gave the UK premiere of the piece in 2016, shortly after Bern’s death. The piece uses only the words of Christ without their specific context from a composite of the four Gospel records. Herbolsheimer uses a combination of Latin and English. This allows him to concentrate specifically on the words and to repeat them with great freedom. The music is exquisitely crafted and the parts are very carefully layered. They rise with increasing intensity and then fade back into silence. We are able to hear the full range of emotion in the human voice.

We are delighted to have recorded Bern’s music, and would like to dedicate our CD to his memory. Borrowing words from the final movement of ‘Seven Last Words’ we offer this tribute to Bern: “Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit.”

Willow Consort
Danny Purtell, conductor




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