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Track(s) taken from SIGCD285

There was a child

composer
first performed on 2/05/2009, St Andrew's Hall, Norwich

Joan Rodgers (soprano), Toby Spence (tenor), City of Birmingham Symphony Chorus, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Simon Halsey (conductor)
Studio Master FLAC & ALAC downloads available
CD-Quality:
Studio Master:
CD-Quality:
Studio Master:
Recording details: June 2011
Symphony Hall, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Produced by Robin Tyson
Engineered by Mike Hatch & Dave Rowell
Release date: July 2012
Total duration: 50 minutes 54 seconds
 

Reviews

'Faced with a commission to pay tribute to his friend's son whose life was cut tragically short, Jonathan Dove could all too easily have turned to composing a Requiem. Instead, he has fashioned an oratorio celebrating childhood and young life from birth. A Walt Whitman poem gives the work its title and finale, in which innocence and experience are grafted on to an ecstatic sense of eternal continuity. Texts are adroitly assembled from authors such as Thomas Traherne and Emily Dickinson, and there's a penultimate triptych involving Chidiock Tichborne, Shakespeare and Tennyson in musings on loss and grief. It all plays to Dove's trademark strengths: the young choirs draw on his community music prowess and his approachable idiom shows his willingness to refract a multiplicity of influences, ranging from Walton to Britten to John Adams. The setting of Keats's A Song about Myself is an impish Brittenesque scherzo, revelling in the freshness of the children's choir. In this live recording of its premiere, conductor Simon Halsey's CBSO forces savour the music's immediacy' (BBC Music Magazine)
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