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Track(s) taken from CDA66030

For lo, I raise up, Op 145

composer
1914; ST soli, SATB divisi + organ; published in 1939
author of text
Habakkuk 1: 6-12; 2: 1-3, 14, 20, adapted

Worcester Cathedral Choir, Donald Hunt (conductor), Paul Trepte (organ)
Recording details: July 1981
Worcester Cathedral, United Kingdom
Produced by Simon Perry
Engineered by Tony Faulkner
Release date: May 1988
Total duration: 8 minutes 29 seconds

Cover artwork: Worcester Cathedral, from a watercolour. William Callow (1812-1908)
Reproduced by kind permission of The Worcester City Museum Service
 

Other recordings available for download

The Choir of Trinity College Cambridge, Stephen Layton (conductor), Madeleine Todd (soprano), Jamie Roberts (tenor), Owain Park (organ)
Westminster Abbey Choir, James O'Donnell (conductor), Peter Holder (organ), James Thomson (treble), Simon Wall (tenor)
St Paul's Cathedral Choir, John Scott (conductor), Andrew Lucas (organ)
Kenan Burrows (treble), William Kendall (tenor), Winchester Cathedral Choir, Stephen Farr (organ), David Hill (conductor)
Chichester Cathedral Choir, Charles Harrison (conductor), Dominic Harry (treble), Thomas Perkins (tenor), Timothy Ravalde (organ)

Reviews

‘A prestigious disc’ (The Monthly Guide to Recorded Music)
For lo, I raise up, Op 145, Stanford’s most dramatic anthem, was composed in 1914, though it was left unpublished until 1939. When the strategic bombing of London began in January 1915, Stanford moved out to Windsor where it was safer and, according to E H Fellowes, he subsequently became a regular visitor to St George’s Chapel where his RCM colleague, Parratt, was organist and music director. (The manuscript of the anthem still resides in the Library of St George’s.) Horrified by the war and what he saw as Germany’s betrayal of its artistic heritage, Stanford attempted to articulate his hope for Britain’s future deliverance through the analogy of Habakkuk’s Old Testament prophecies. Set in F minor, the first part of this extended work is a turbulent affair, an indictment of the war-mongers who plundered and laid waste to the land. Yet, in the face of inexorable violence and destruction, Stanford mirrored Habakkuk’s vision of peace in a climactic statement of hope and deliverance (‘We shall not die’) in F major. Building on this declaration of spiritual confidence the momentum increases, animated by a sense of divine destiny (‘The vision is yet for the appointed time’) and an impassioned acclamation of faith (‘For the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord’) which is tempered only by the gripping tranquillity of the hushed coda (‘But the Lord is in his holy temple’).

from notes by Jeremy Dibble © 2017

Other albums featuring this work

Bairstow, Harris & Stanford: Choral works
Studio Master: CDA68259Studio Master FLAC & ALAC downloads available
Lest we forget
Studio Master: SIGCD562Download onlyStudio Master FLAC & ALAC downloads available
Stanford: Choral Music
Studio Master: CDA68174Studio Master FLAC & ALAC downloads available
Stanford: Sacred choral music
CDS44311/33CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
The English Anthem, Vol. 6
CDA66826Download only
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