Reviews for
GMCD 7151 - Peac In our Time
Music of Peace and War
From Choir and Organ September/October 1999 - Page
68
Nuggets Of gold
MAGNIFICAT THE LIFE OF THE VIRGIN MARY IN MUSIC
The Choir of Lincoln College, Oxford /David Terry (dir) / Benjamin Nicholas (org)
Gulld GMCD 7158
PEACE IN OUR TIME - MUSIC OF PEACE AND WAR
The Choir of Lincoln College, Oxford / Benjamin Nicholas (dir) / Nicholas Chalmers (org)
GuIld GMCD 7151
It's good to see that some of the less well known ( I hold back from saying lesser)
Oxbridge College Choirs are recording CDs these days. It's also heartening to see that
individual colleges are taking pride in their musical alumni to the extent of encouraging
them to give concerts, go on tour and produce fine recordings every so often.
These two CDs hail from John Wesley's old alma mater, Lincoln College, Oxford. Being the
less than proud possessors of probably the dullest instrument in Christendom, both CDs
were recorded in Exeter College's Chapel next door. A little over a year separates the
discs but there are a few of the same singers on both and overall the sound the choir
makes is not terribly dissimilar.
The first is a cornucopia of music written in honour of the Blessed Virgin. The repertoire
is thoroughly predictable and very sweetly sung throughout, though sometimes too much so.
I am pleased to be able to report that this is one of a few collegiate CDs where the
bottom end of the choir makes an uncharacteristically mature sound. Refreshing in this
type of recording where so often the romantic repertoire is the 'achilles heel' of so many
youthful aspirations. Benjamin Nicholas' accompaniment is mature throughout, though
Howells' Magnificat ( Coll Reg.) really cries out for a big fat. broad diapason sound in
the Gloria climax. Somehow just 'loud organ sound' is simply not enough. The organ does
sound more at home in Dupré's versets on Ave Maris Stella here too, the men shine in the
alternate verses of plainsong. Schubert's Stabat Mater, a super but brief setting, is
expressively sung and contains some of the most beautifully shaped choral singing on the
disc. Tavener's Hymn for the Dormition, a rather tricky little number requiring 'harmonic'
singers as opposed to ones that 'just sing the part', comes off exceptionally well; almost
worthy of the epithet, professional.
A great disc, my only wish being for a bit of male alto sound for colour and spice which
is lacking around middle C.
The second disc is concerned with more sombre things, though the format is pictorial
starting as it does, with the Last Post and ending with Reveille. For me, this CD contains
more expressive singing than the first; maybe that's the subject material or the line up
of singers or whatever. The sound is more vibrant - taking a chance once or twice, even if
strain or inaccuracy creeps in. 'He who dares...'
There are some jewels here too. Stanford's For lo, I raise up. Vaughan Williams's Lord,
thou hast been our refuge and Kodály's Agnus dei from the Missa Brevis. All are sung with
youthful verve and dignity. The Kodály is especially impressive, not least for the
tortuously high solo soprano parts, carried off here with almost ease. Douglas Guest's
They shall grow not old and the Kontakion of the Dead are almost prerequisite for this
genre of programme.
Of the unknown territory I can especially recommend Philip Wilby's A Peace Prayer: Dove è
Amore and John Joubert's Libera Plebem. With such a varied programme I could have done
without hearing yet another performance of Parry's My Soul, there is a country and I'm not
sure about Valiant for Truth of Vaughan Williams for that matter. What I would have loved
is a few German pieces. Think long and hard about it and the answer is there somewhere.
Congratulations to the College, the Choir and both the Organist and the Director. for
the results of their endeavours, I, for one, will return to in the future. If you're
tiring of
the Oxbridge traditional sound then give this one a whirl. You'll enjoy it.
Both CDs are perfectly recorded by Gary Cole and the booklet design for the first is
unusually good.
Very rarely can I say that.
PETER BEAVEN
From Gramophone - March 1999 Issue
Christopher Millington (tpt) Benjamin Nicholas, Nicholas
Chalmers (orgs); Lincoln College Choir, Oxford/ Benjamin Nicholas. Guild GMCD 7151 (72
minutes):DDD - Text and translations included
Works by
Guest, Howells, Joubert, Kodaly, Langlais, Parry, Pärt, Stanford, Tavener, Vaughan
Williams and Wilby
An imaginative and varied sequence eloquently realized by one and
all. Twenty-two-year St. Paul's Cathedral Organ Scholar Benjamin Nicholas gives noble
renderings of Jean Langlais's 'Chant Héroique' and 'Chant de paix' from the Neuf pièce
of 1942-3 (the former dedicated to his contemporary countryman and wartime casualty, Jehan
Alain), whilst also drawing a consistent radiant response from his equally youthful Oxford
choir. The first of Herbert Howells's Three Carol-anthems of 1918-20 (a luminous setting
of Frances Chesterton's Here is the little door) stands out as ever, whilst the happy
inclusion of John Joubert's motet Libera Plebem, offers further evidence of this
underrated figure's powerful gifts.
Page revised 03.09.2000
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