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Choir of Exeter College Oxford - Stanford, Parry & Edwards: Choral Works (2014)

Choir of Exeter College Oxford - Stanford, Parry & Edwards: Choral Works (2014)
  • Title: Stanford, Parry & Edwards: Choral Works
  • Year Of Release: 2014
  • Label: EM Records
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:19:23
  • Total Size: 294 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. "Songs of Farewell": My Soul, There Is a Country (3:15)
02. "Songs of Farewell": I Know My Soul Hath Power to Know All Things (2:02)
03. "Songs of Farewell": Never Weather-Beaten Sail (2:58)
04. "Songs of Farewell": There Is an Old Belief (3:26)
05. "Songs of Farewell": At the Round Earth's Imagined Corners (6:11)
06. Jerusalem (2:36)
07. Dear Lord and Father of Mankind (3:41)
08. I Was Glad (5:22)
09. Mass in G Major, Op. 46: I. Kyrie (4:56)
10. Mass in G Major, Op. 46: II. Gloria (1:07)
11. Mass in G Major, Op. 46: III. Credo (12:45)
12. Mass in G Major, Op. 46: IV. Sanctus (2:11)
13. Mass in G Major, Op. 46: V. Benedictus (2:57)
14. Mass in G Major, Op. 46: VI. Agnus Dei (5:06)
15. Flyht (6:55)

EMR CD021 features a choral work by one of the giants of British music, recorded here for the first time over a century after its composition. The Mass in G by Charles Villiers Stanford was completed in 1892 and is notable for its opulence, employing a full orchestra and vocal soloists as well as chorus; and its colourful, characterful setting of the liturgical text shows Stanford at the height of his powers – a master of structure, form and musical architecture.

The Mass in G is complemented on this disc with works by another highly significant musical figure, C. Hubert H. Parry. His ‘Songs of Farewell’ are gems of choral writing, their intricately shaped lines and finely crafted textures pointing with a profound poignancy the meaning of their texts; the hymn ‘Dear Lord and Father of mankind’ and, especially, the unison song ‘Jerusalem’ are familiar and well-loved settings; whilst the processional ‘I was glad’, written for the coronation of Edward VII and performed at every coronation since, has a verve and splendour that epitomise the grandeur of ceremony.

Stanford and Parry may be said to represent the beginning of the English choral tradition and this new disc acknowledges their lasting influence in a work by a contemporary composer, Nicholas O’Neill. ‘Flyht’ draws on texts by Samuel Wesley and Old English poetry from the eleventh-century Exeter Book. Marrying past and present, the work is a clear demonstration of the living choral tradition that continues to flourish today.


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