Reviews
GMCD 7272 Songs of the Soul
Choir
& Organ-05-06-200558'09",
CHORAL SONGS OF THE
SOUL
The
Saint Louis Chamber Chorus / Philip
Barnes (dir)
óóóó
There is a gripping
Sound an track one in the first of four settings by Carlos Surinach of words by
St John of the Cross. Other composers featured are Victoria, Alan Ridout and
living composers Sasha Manning, Clare Maclean, Geoffrey Manning and Carl Rütti.
The recording is `up-close' and yet makes good use of the ample acoustic of St
Margaret of Scotland Church, St Louis, giving a very clear reading of the open
and vital sound of this excellent choir.
MusicWeb Wednesday February 08 06
One of
the finest choral recordings I’ve ever heard — brilliant singing effectively
programmed and nicely recorded. ... Paul Shoemaker
Songs of the Soul
(Texts by St. John of the Cross (fl. 1577) unless otherwise noted)
Carlos SURINACH (1915-1997)
Canciones del Alma (1964): Noche oscura del alma [4.48]; Llama de
amor viva [4.57] soloists: Nathan Ruggles; Mark Poe; Susan Greene; Delirio del
alma [6.11]; Gozo a la fé [7.21]
Tomás Luis de VICTORIA (c.1548-1611)
(Texts from the Bible)
Iste Sanctus [1.54]; Senex Puerum Portabat [2.50]; O Quam Gloriosum [2.32];
Beati Immaculati [2.14]
Alan RIDOUT (1934-1996)
O Flame of Love So Living [2.08] (English translation by Roy Campbell)
Sasha Johnson MANNING (b. 1963)
Romança VI-(SSAATTBB) [4.47]
Clare MACLEAN (b. 1958)
Aunque es de Noche (SSSAATTBB) [6.31]
Geoffrey BURGON (b. 1941)
But Have Been Found Again (SSAATTBB) (1983) [5.52]
(English translation by Roy Campbell) Soloists: Amanda Meinen; Elise
Ibendahl; Kathleen Mead.
Carl RÜTTI (b. 1949)
An den Geist (SSAATTBB) [5.02] (Text by Rilke)
Saint
Louis Chamber Chorus/Philip Barnes
rec. St. Margaret of Scotland Church, St. Louis, Missouri, USA, 25 May 2004.
Notes in English and Deutsch. Texts and English translations. Photo of artists.
GUILD
GMCD 7272 [58.09]
This is not only an excellent program
with a sensible alternation between older and newer music but one of the best
quality choir recordings I’ve ever heard both in performance and recording.
Having been a member of a chorus and having listened to our own concert
recordings, I know how difficult it is to put together a program with a varied
sound and high quality. That being said, although Surinach’s canciones
are separate pieces, I would have preferred to see them grouped together on the
disk rather than intermixed with the other pieces. True, with a programmable CD
player, we can hear them in any order desired, but that takes extra effort. And
for those who prefer a mixed-up program, there is always the "randomize" button.
St. John of the Cross was from Avila,
Spain, and wrote these poems in about 1577 while imprisoned in Toledo by the
Church which would canonize him in 1726. The style of the poetry is almost
hysterical in its hallucinatory religious imagery suggesting that the poet was
near starvation and in despair of his life. He remained devout nonetheless.
Surinach at his best is a superb
composer. These "Songs of the Soul" are among his better works, and justifiably
the album is named after them. His skill as a conductor was shown in the first
recording, on MGM label, of Hovhaness’s St. Vartan Symphony (No. 9),
still the best recording of the work ever made - sound as well as performance.
Surinach, like Turina, studied in Germany. He eventually emigrated to the U.S.
but remained capable of brilliant idiomatic writing in the Spanish style, as
here. He has composed a wide range of music in many styles, including a frenetic
and satirical Piano Concerto.
The modern pieces tend to make excessive
use of seventh, ninth, etcetera, chords. Bach and Buxtehude used such chords,
but much more sparingly. Victoria and the other Renaissance composers used them
more sparingly still, which I think is closer to ideal.
After the Surinach, the best pieces on
the disk are the Maclean and the Rütti, both of which achieve marvelous effects
with broken rhythms and polytonal phrases, and both of which are fiendishly
difficult to sing. Only the most skilled groups would dare attempt them. The
Maclean piece sets part of the same text as the fourth of the Surinach
Canciones.
The choir was founded in 1956 by Ronald
Arnatt, then recently arrived from England. The current director, Philip Barnes,
was also educated in England and sang in many British cathedral choirs. While I
am aware that choruses often mispronounce the words they sing for the sake of
optimum vocal tone, in the finale of this disk with the chorus chanting over and
over "aunque es de noche" what they are actually saying is "onk wayz day no chay,"
with broad, fully glided American vowels, enough to disturb the peace of my
Spanish teacher’s eternal rest. Although they respected Victoria’s clear Latin
vowels while singing with hushed reverence, apparently when they sing loud they
automatically go into "Broadway" American musical mode. Surely singers as good
as these could have done a little better than that.
Paul Shoemaker

Page revised 28.04.2006
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