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Track(s) taken from CDA66374

Greater love hath no man

First line:
Many waters cannot quench love
composer
1912; SB soli; SATB divisi + organ; commission for Charles Macpherson, sub-organist of St Paul's Cathedral
author of text
Song of Solomon 8: 7,6; John 15: 13; 1 Peter 2: 24; 1 Corinthians 6: 11; 1 Peter 2: 9; Romans 12: 1

St Paul's Cathedral Choir, John Scott (conductor), Andrew Lucas (organ)
Recording details: June 1989
St Paul's Cathedral, London, United Kingdom
Produced by Mark Brown
Engineered by Antony Howell
Release date: June 1990
Total duration: 6 minutes 42 seconds
 

Other recordings available for download

St Paul's Cathedral Choir, Thomas Kelly (treble), Martin Oxenham (baritone), John Scott (conductor), Huw Williams (organ)
Daniel Livermore (treble), Jonathan Brown (bass), Westminster Abbey Choir, James O'Donnell (conductor), Daniel Cook (organ)
Chichester Cathedral Choir, Charles Harrison (conductor), Jago Brazier (treble), Richard Paterson (baritone), Timothy Ravalde (organ)
King's College Choir Cambridge, Daniel Hyde (conductor), Samuel Hodson (treble), Henry Brearley (bass), Matthew Martin (organ)

Reviews

‘Serene beauty that heals the spirit and calms the troubled soul. They sing with perfect unity and a rare vigour. Hyperion has captured the famed acoustics of St Paul's to perfection. There is no finer collection available’ (American Record Guide)
The anthem Greater love hath no man was commissioned in 1912 for Charles Macpherson, the sub-organist of St Paul’s Cathedral. Intended as a meditation for Passiontide, Greater love hath no man drew its text from a compilation of scriptural passages in Daily Light on the Daily Path, a series of booklets containing Bible readings which Ireland used to observe on a regular basis. The anthem rapidly gained currency in cathedrals and church choirs and, with the outbreak of war in 1914, its text gained a special resonance as the casualties from the front mounted. Indeed, with Alice Meynell’s poem Summer in England, 1914, which contrasted the slaughter of Flanders’ fields with the tranquil scenes of England, and the subject of sacrifice emanating from pulpits throughout the land, Ireland discovered that his anthem inadvertently resonated with a wider national mood. Although Greater love might outwardly seem to be influenced by the English verse anthem, in reality it has the scope and narrative redolent of a small cantata in its manner of continuity and ‘dialogue’ between soloists and chorus (the latter indeed assuming the role of ‘turba’ in contrast to its more normal role of reflective commentary). Here Ireland adroitly assigns the words of Peter (1 Peter 2: 24), presented in the first person plural (‘that we, being dead to sins’), to the chorus, as if they were the people of the church. Similarly, Paul’s words from Romans 12: 1, ‘I beseech you brethren’, used to epitomize the anthem’s theme of self-sacrifice, are given initially to altos and tenors in unison before they are joined by a ‘willing body of believers’. And even when reflective commentary is operative, passages such as the opening twenty bars are afforded greater impact by the method of solo voices (tenor) being affirmed by full chorus.

from notes by Jeremy Dibble © 2017

Other albums featuring this work

Finzi, Bax & Ireland: Choral Music
Studio Master: CDA68167Studio Master FLAC & ALAC downloads available
Lest we forget
Studio Master: SIGCD562Download onlyStudio Master FLAC & ALAC downloads available
Now the green blade riseth
Studio Master: KGS0065-DDownload onlyStudio Master FLAC & ALAC downloads available
Remembrance
CDA67398
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