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Track(s) taken from CDA67576

Vox dicentis: Clama

composer
1911, for King's College Cambridge
author of text
Isaiah 40: 6-11

Alexander Robarts (treble), Jonathan Knight (tenor), St John's College Choir Cambridge, David Hill (conductor)
Recording details: January 2006
St John's College Chapel, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Produced by Mark Brown
Engineered by Julian Millard
Release date: October 2006
Total duration: 9 minutes 0 seconds
 

Other recordings available for download

St Paul's Cathedral Choir, John Scott (conductor)
Tenebrae, Nigel Short (conductor), Victoria Meteyard (soprano), Jeremy Budd (tenor)

Reviews

‘David Hill's Advent programme imaginatively mingles antiphons, carols, hymns and motets. Favourites alternate with relative rarities such as Edward Naylor's Vox dicentis: Clama, whose sumptuous sonorities unfold gloriously in the chapel's acoustic … the John's choir, fielding what sounds like a vintage crop of trebles, sings throughout with its trademark mixture of refinement and gutsy energy’ (The Daily Telegraph)

‘This recording holds some of the most exquisite choral singing I have ever heard. They must be one of the finest choirs in England. Not only is the technical standard dazzlingly high, but the readings are engaging, animated and sensitively shaped’ (American Record Guide)

‘Blend, balance, intonation and diction are all unfailingly top-drawer, and the choir's unanimity of phrasing and dynamic shading come across as something quite special … both engineering and annotation are well up to the same standard’ (Fanfare, USA)

‘This is a very fine disc indeed … the overall impression with which I’m left is one of great satisfaction and pleasure. The programme has been assembled with great imagination and the execution is well nigh flawless. When one adds in excellent and very atmospheric sound, first rate notes and texts and translations, it all adds up to a very distinguished package indeed. I shall be surprised if I encounter a finer CD of Christmas music this year’ (MusicWeb International)
This is the motet Vox dicentis: Clama by Edward Naylor (1867–1934), who was organist of Emmanuel College, Cambridge. Apart from an extensive body of church music, he also wrote an opera (The Angelus, performed at Covent Garden in 1904), was one of the earliest advocates of musical authenticity, and an authority on Shakespeare and music. Vox dicentis: Clama was composed in 1911 for King’s College, Cambridge, and sets texts from Isaiah describing the voice of one crying out in the wilderness. It is an extended work, in four distinct sections, with the choral textures frequently dividing into lush eight-part writing that consciously used the resonant acoustic of King’s chapel. The striking opening is almost operatic with a declamatory bass line and dramatic interjections from the rest of the choir. Particularly effective too is the final pastoral-like section, which features a solo treble setting words dwelling on the image of Christ the Good Shepherd, and an ending exploiting harmonic suspensions of caressing beauty.

from notes by Andrew Burn © 2006

Voici le motet Vox dicentis: Clama d’Edward Naylor (1867–1934). Organiste d’Emmanuel College (Cambridge) et auteur d’un vaste corpus de musique liturgique, il écrivit aussi un opéra (The Angelus, donné à Covent Garden en 1904), fut l’un des tout premiers défenseurs de l’authenticité musicale et fit autorité sur Shakespeare et la musique. Composé en 1911 pour le King’s College de Cambridge, Vox dicentis: Clama met en musique des textes d’Isaïe sur la voix de quelqu’un criant dans le désert. C’est une œuvre vaste, en quatre sections distinctes, où les textures chorales se scindent souvent en une généreuse écriture à huit parties usant sciemment de l’acoustique résonante de la chapelle du King’s College. L’ouverture saisissante est presque opératique, avec sa ligne de basse déclamatoire et ses dramatiques interjections émanant du reste du chœur. Tout aussi efficace, la section finale, de type pastorale, met en scène un treble solo chantant des paroles qui s’attardent sur l’image du Christ bon berger, et une conclusion exploitant des suspensions harmoniques d’une beauté caressante.

extrait des notes rédigées par Andrew Burn © 2006
Français: Hypérion

Diese ist die Motette Vox dicentis: Clama von Edward Naylor (1867–1934), der Organist am Emmanuel College, Cambridge war. Neben einem umfangreichen Kirchenmusikœuvre schrieb er auch eine Oper (The Angelus, die 1904 in Covent Garden aufgeführt wurde). Edward Naylor gehörte zu den Ersten, die sich für die Aufführungspraxis Alter Musik einsetzten. Zudem war er eine Koryphäe in Sachen Shakespeare und Musik. Vox dicentis: Clama wurde 1911 für das King’s College, Cambridge komponiert und zieht einen Text aus Jesaja heran, der die aus der Wüste rufende Stimme des Predigers beschreibt. Naylors Stück ist lang, in vier deutlich unterschiedliche Abschnitte unterteilt und enthält häufig satte achtstimmige Chorpassagen, die bewusst die nachhallende Akustik der Kirche des King’s College ausnutzen. Der beeindruckende Anfang mit seiner deklamierenden Basslinie und den theatralischen Einwürfen vom Rest des Chores wirkt fast wie eine Oper. Besonders wirksam erweist sich auch der pastorale letzte Abschnitt, in dem eine solistische Sopranstimme das im Text zum Ausdruck kommende Bild von Christus als den Guten Hirten musikalisch nachzeichnet, und der Schluss aus harmonischen Vorhalten von inniger Schönheit.

aus dem Begleittext von Andrew Burn © 2006
Deutsch: Elke Hockings

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