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CDA67575

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Recording details: Various dates
Hertford College Chapel, Oxford, United Kingdom
Produced by Various producers
Engineered by Various engineers
Release date: April 2006
Total duration: 70 minutes 13 seconds

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'...you may confidently invest in this disc. Its musical rewards are ample' (Fanfare, USA)

'This disc offers considerable rewards in an admittedly parochial field, and also preserves a delectable snap-shot of the Schola Cantorum of Oxford on outstanding form, over a decade ago' (International Record Review)

'Here's a vital and beautifully performed collection of modern a cappella choral music from a most excellent choir with a considerable recording history ... It's not a surprise that Mr Summerly and his choir can handle fiendishly difficult modern music with all of the skill, authority and pleasing sound they bring to early music. Hyperion comes through again with a superior booklet and enviable recording quality' (American Record Guide)

Children of our time
Three Easter Anthems  Antony Pitts (b1969)
Five Negro Spirituals from 'A child of our time'  Sir Michael Tippett (1905-1998)
No 1: Steal away  [3'00]
Five Negro Spirituals from 'A child of our time'  Sir Michael Tippett (1905-1998)
In the silence of the night  Ruth Byrchmore (b1966)
Movement 1: Echo  [3'41]
Movement 2: Song  [6'20]
Five Negro Spirituals from 'A child of our time'  Sir Michael Tippett (1905-1998)
Five Madrigals to poems by e e cummings  Mark Edgley Smith (1955-2008)
Five Negro Spirituals from 'A child of our time'  Sir Michael Tippett (1905-1998)
No 4: By and by  [1'13]
Five Negro Spirituals from 'A child of our time'  Sir Michael Tippett (1905-1998)
No 5: Deep river  [3'41]
In 1978 Schola Cantorum of Oxford—the university’s acclaimed chamber choir—recorded Tippett’s Five Negro Spirituals from A child of our time. Sir Michael wrote, in his sleeve note accompanying the LP release on L’Oiseau Lyre (DSLO 25, re-issued on CD Belart 461 628-2, no longer available): ‘I had never heard the complete set till the recording sessions. I then realised that the sound of these songs when sung thus is quite different from their original settings in the oratorio. They became, as it were, the huge voice of a crowd of folk singing together. It should be clear from the above account of all the variety of pieces on this [all-Tippett] disc how remarkable and resilient a group of young singers the Schola Cantorum of Oxford is, under their equally young, gifted conductor Nicholas Cleobury.’

Some twenty years later, under Jeremy Summerly, the choir was asked to make a new recording of the Spirituals to mark the ninetieth birthday of the composer, by then the group’s long-standing Patron. This new disc—never previously released—is the result of those sessions, where the Tippett works are complemented by recordings of the winning entries in an international composition competition organized by the choir and other works written for it around the same time.

And what an astonishing display of choral pyrotechnics this produced. From the seductive intricacies of Mark Edgley Smith’s E E Cummings settings, through the blues-infused harmonies of Antony Pitts’s polychoral Thou knowest my lying down, to the extended genius of Francis Pott’s Amore langueo (containing what Summerly describes as ‘one of the great moments in English choral music from any period’), this new disc offers fascinating discoveries to the choral aficionado and seventy minutes of the very finest choral experience to all.

All works, apart from the Tippett and Pitts, are first recordings.