Recordings
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Blow, Boyce & Handel: Music for St Paul's
CDH55359
Helios (Hyperion's budget label)
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Details
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Movement 01: We praise thee, O God
Movement 02: To thee all angels cry aloud
Movement 03: To thee Cherubin and Seraphin
Movement 04: The glorious company of the apostles
Movement 05: When thou took'st upon thee
Movement 06: We believe that thou shalt come
Movement 07: Day by day we magnify thee
Movement 08: And we worship thy name
Movement 09: Vouchsafe, O Lord
Movement 10: O Lord, in thee have I trusted
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The Utrecht Te Deum and Jubilate was a turning point in Handel’s career, as it was for English church music. It was the first major piece of religious music Handel wrote to English words, and it is the earliest choral work by him that remained in the repertory: it was performed in St Paul’s during the annual Festival of the Sons of the Clergy every other year (alternating with the Purcell Te Deum) until 1743, when it was replaced by Handel’s Dettingen Te Deum. Although it needs only one more instrument than the Croft setting—a solo flute—it is more spacious in its conception and more varied in its material. Indeed, it is particularly attractive because it is so varied: it ranges through F sharp minor, A minor, F major, D minor, C major and G minor as well as the expected ceremonial D major, and a surprising amount of it explores introspective areas of feeling. The Jubilate is a much shorter text than the Te Deum, so it allowed Handel to expand the size of his movements, and to demand more virtuosity from his vocal and instrumental soloists. He reworked the Jubilate in about 1717/18 for the much smaller forces available in the Duke of Chandos’s chapel at Cannons near Edgware in Middlesex.
from notes by Peter Holman © 1998