"a most stimulating collection of music and it is hard to imagine
that it could be performed better than by Jeremy Backhouse and his
superb choir"
Music Web
International
"Our great British choral tradition would be infinitely poorer but
for the dedication of groups like the Vasari Singers. The choir recently
commissioned 10 composers to write works 'that might reflect the state of
the world at the start of the new millennium'. Nine of them are recorded
here for the first time, with three others also new to disc. The
consistently high level of invention and diverse styles contribute to the
album's overall success"
Classic FM
Magazine
"this lovely disc from Signum Classics, recorded at Tonbridge
.... leaving room for the listener to wallow in the gorgeousness of
an assembly of luxurious voices"
Muso
"an exiting disc, that enhances Vasari's position at the
forefront of choral singing in his country"
Choir Schools Today
"Choral artistry, it comes as no surprise, is exceptional
– this has always been a first-class outfit – and there’s new
music worth hearing as well"
American Record Guide
Classic FM Magazine, April 2005 ****
Our great British choral tradition would
be infinitely poorer but for the dedication of groups like the
Vasari Singers. The choir recently commissioned 10 composers to
write works "that might reflect the state of the world at the
start of the new millenniun." Nine of them are recorded here for
the first time, with three others also new to disc. The
consistently high level of invention and diverse styles contribute
to the album's overall success.
Andrew Stewart
Gramophone November 2005
Modern settings delivered by virtuoso singers for whom many were
written.
A syrupy piece of kitsch by Ward Swingle is the odd one out here. The
remainder of the disc is given over to English composers but the one thing
linking all 12 anthems is that they have been composed since 2000. Only
Todd’s wordless evocation of the singing of angels might be seen as using
choral voices in a non-traditional way. As for the others, each relies on
conventional choral devices, leaving the rest to the musicality and
technical assurance of the singers themselves.
In this respect the Vasari Singers and Jeremy Backhouse have few
equals. For the past quarter of a century that they have been a
consistently outstanding choir and a majority of these pieces were
commissioned for their 25th anniversary. One is sumptuous of the words of
the Sufi mystic Al-Junaid that Gabriel Jackson that tailored to the unique
strengths of the Vasaris, which he describes as ‘transparent, refined and
meticulous, but also possessed of great fervour and vitality’.
Those qualities are much in evidence here in music ranging from the
harrowing grief of Johnathon Rathbone’s ‘Absalon, my son’ to the
exhilarating ‘Bless the Lord’ by Jonathon Dove. Only Stephen Barlow’s
‘When I See on Rood’ seems to have stretched the choir to its limits. It
is as much a testament to the Vasari’s supreme collective virtuosity as to
Jeremy Filsell’s innate sensitivity, that Filsell’s staggeringly
resourceful organ playing in three of the anthems (by Dove, MacMillan,
Filsell himself) complements rather than outshines the singing.
Marc Rochester
Music Web International
The Vasari Singers is one of Britain’s finest choirs,
as I know from having acquired quite a few of their recordings over a long
period. However, I hadn’t realised that the choir has been in existence
for 25 years.
To celebrate that significant anniversary the choir and
their conductor, Jeremy Backhouse, had the inspired idea to commission not
a single anniversary work but instead shorter pieces from no less than ten
composers. Every single work on this CD is here recorded for the very
first time and nine of them are Vasari silver jubilee commissions. The
tenth, from Francis Pott, has evolved into a much bigger work which the
choir will première in 2006. The works on the disc that were not
commissioned for the anniversary are those by Jonathan Dove, Jonathan
Rathbone and James MacMillan.
I may as well say straightaway that all the pieces are
of high quality - and some more than that - and without exception they
receive superb performances. So if I don’t mention a piece specifically
that should not be taken as implying anything adverse. It’s interesting,
however, that almost all the composers who received commissions have
responded with pieces that are predominantly subdued in tone. Does that
say something about the times in which we live, I wonder? For the most
part the pieces, including the three that weren’t commissioned, are rooted
in the language of the "traditional" church anthem. However, these works
expand, renew and enrich that tradition: there is nothing dull or routine
here. In fact these compositions give one confidence that liturgical music
of high quality is still being written today.
It’s worth quoting from Jeremy Backhouse’s very
interesting liner note, in which he explains the idea behind the
commissions. He tells us that his brief to the composers was that "their
work should be able to sit comfortably within the context of a cathedral
Evensong but that it could also look beyond any constraints of Liturgy or
formal religious doctrine to embrace a wider, more ecumenical audience
..." I would say that for the most part the composers have met that
challenge successfully.
The piece by Jonathan Dove, one of the few that is
accompanied, is imaginative and colourful. The choir starts off quietly,
in contrast to the virtuoso organ part but Dove builds the work, a setting
of words from Psalm 104, to an exciting conclusion, driven on by the
organ. The piece that follows it, by Jonathan Rathbone, confronts a major
challenge head-on. He was inspired by the famous anthems, When David
heard, by Thomas Weelkes and Thomas Tomkins. How on earth do you write
a setting of the same words that avoids either being a pastiche, a pale
imitation, or something that is dwarfed by those earlier masterpieces? It
seems to me that Rathbone has reinterpreted the earlier works in a
powerful and individual way. Like his predecessors, he responds to the
words with music of subdued but nonetheless deep grief. Indeed, as is the
case with the Weelkes and Tomkins anthems, Rathbone’s offering is all the
more effective because he employs restraint. The piece is sung with superb
control and the hushed ending is particularly atmospheric.
I was greatly taken with Gabriel Jackson’s piece,
Now I have known, O Lord, for which he has used words by a 10th
century Sufi mystic. The imagery of the words themselves is wonderful –
one might imagine John Tavener setting them. As I read them they are the
words of a devout and humble man to his Maker. Jackson writes "the text
seemed to demand a setting of great inwardness." The anthem begins
quietly, in a mood of rapt adoration and continues in this subdued and
intimate vein for most of its duration. Eventually a brief, radiant climax
is achieved for the penultimate line of text "In wondrous and ecstatic
Grace" but for the following words, "I feel Thee touch my inmost ground"
the music sinks back into mystic adoration. This is a quite splendid piece
and the Vasari Singers do it full justice.
Organist and composer, Jeremy Filsell, contributes a
setting of words by Alice Meynell (1847-1922). The music is powerful and
original and, perhaps unsurprisingly, the organ plays an important role.
Filsell uses the text imaginatively and his music responds to and enhances
the imagery of each individual stanza in an impressive way.
I confess I am still coming to terms with a couple of
the pieces. Will Todd has already had a major work, St Cuthbert,
recorded on CD (review.
His Vasari commission, Angel Song II, is inspired by the idea of
angels singing on Christmas night. It begins, not jubilantly, as you might
anticipate, but quietly, with the angelic choirs heard as from a distance.
Todd says "the music weaves a gentle melody over the aleatoric textures of
the accompanying voices." In fact, the music is hushed throughout – this
is about as far as you could get from the angelic "Glorias" in Ding,
Dong, Merrily on High! It’s ethereal and atmospheric but I’m not
entirely sure if it works as a stand-alone piece. Todd suggests that he
might one day incorporate the piece into a much larger one and I think it
might just sit more comfortably there as part of a greater whole.
The other work about which I’m unsure about at present
is Barrie Bignold’s Peace. I think part of my difficulty stems from
the text, specially written by Bob Cassidy. Cassidy’s words are not easily
assimilated, at least not by me, and as Bignold says in a note: "This
motet is all about the poem." So far I find this piece the least
successful on the disc but that’s a wholly subjective view and one that I
may modify with further listening. Already I can say that it contains some
eloquent music and the ending is lovely.
As it happens, the final work on the disc, by Ward
Swingle, which immediately follows the Bignold, also sets words written
specially for the composer to set. However, Tony Vincent Isaacs’ Give
us this day is a much more straightforward poem and it has inspired
Swingle to write a very simple, direct four-part anthem. The music rarely
rises above piano and the little refrain after each verse is beguiling.
Though the music may sound simple it clearly needs a fine and
sensitive choir to do it well. Happily, with the Vasari Singers on hand
there’s no chance that the piece won’t be done justice.
The idea of these Vasari’s jubilee commissions was an
imaginative and stimulating concept. I believe that the vision behind it
has been vindicated triumphantly and the commissions have inspired some
excellent additions to the choral repertory. I hope that enterprising
choirs will investigate these pieces for they all merit wider circulation.
However, only expert choirs need apply!
There are very useful, short notes on each piece and as
you may have gathered from my comments above these are all by the
respective composers ... with the exception of James MacMillan. Full texts
are also provided. The recorded sound is first class.
In summary, this is a most stimulating collection of
music and it is hard to imagine that it could be performed better than by
Jeremy Backhouse and his superb choir. I congratulate them on their silver
jubilee and on the imaginative way in which they have marked it; a way
that I hope will benefit other choirs as well. This outstanding CD is
already on my shortlist for Recordings of the Year and I recommend it
enthusiastically.
John Quinn
Choir and Organ, November/December 2005
For the choir’s 25th anniversary ten
composers were asked to ite an anthem hat could look beyond the liturgy to
appeal to our multi-cultural society. It’s an interesting and variable
collection and I wholeheartedly applaud the concept. Will Todd’s appealing
Angel Song II. Jeremy Filsell’s Mysterium Christi and Philip
Moore’s I saw him standing are particularly memorable. Ward
Swingle’s tuneful Give us this day is bound to be popular. Two
non-commissions – Jonathan Dove’s Bless the Lord, O my Soul
and MacMillan’s Chosen – are outstanding. The choir sings with
feeling and perception – the MacMillan is suberb.
Shirley Ratcliffe
Muso. Aug/Sept 2005
Vasari Singers are one of the most critically acclaimed
chamber choirs in the UK. Led by the charismatic Jeremy Backhouse, the
choir has performed in most of London's major concert venues and
recorded everything from Lotti to Swingle, picking up Gramophone
nominations and much audience appreciation along the way.
The group's latest project is 10 new commissioned works
from the likes of Gabriel Jackson, Will Todd, Stephen Barlow and Jeremy
Filsell, which received their premiere in May at St John's, Smith Suqare.
The brief stated that each work should be suitable as an anthem in an
Anglican cathedral evensong and should reflect the 21st century
Nine of the commissions appear on this lovely disc from
Signum Classics, recorded at Tonbridge School Chapel, along with three
additional pieces by Jonathan Dove, James MacMillan and Jonathan
Rathbone.
Each piece is pleasingly different -from the vibrant
organ and exultant voices of Dove's Bless the Lord, O My Soul to
the stunningly eerie atmosphere of Angel Song II by Will Todd.
Most of the pieces are either accompanied by Jeremy
Filsell on organ, or a capella, leaving room for the listener to
wallow in the gorgeousness of an assembly of luxurious voices. The
soloists are top quality and the choir's collected sensitivity,
coherence and dramatic sensibility makes up for anything it occasionally
lacks tonally. If you have any doubts about the 21st Century's ability
to produce anything of aesthetic worth, play this disc.
Hazel Davis
Choir Schools Today
The Vasari Singers are one of
this country's longest established quality chamber choirs and leading
proponents of contemporary church music. This disc is made up entirely of
world premiere recordings, 9 of the 12 pieces commissioned for the choir's
25th anniversary, with the guiding brief that the work might reflect the
state of the world at the start of the new millennium, and also sit
comfortably within the context of a cathedral evensong. Consequently, this
is a stimulating and inspiring project between composers and choir.
Highlights among the commissions include Will Todd's Angel Song II,
Humphrey Clucas' Hear my crying, O God, Philip Moore's I saw him standing
and Ward Swingle's Give us this day, while other non-commissioned
premieres include Jonathan Dove's Bless the Lord O my soul and James
Macmillan's Chosen. There can be little doubt that cathedral music needs
the pioneering spirit of the Vasari Singers to encourage new works, yet
one suspects that many of these pieces with a high level of difficulty
will not be finding their way onto cathedral repertoires. Occasionally
moments of these pieces prove too much for the choir, with the sopranos
noticeably losing their even tone in the higher registers, but this is
more than made up for elsewhere, the highlights for me including in the
incisive singing at the jagged rhythms of Dove's Bless the Lord, the
sublime wordless Angel Song II of Todd, and the emotional restraint in
Moore's I saw him standing. Overall, an exiting disc, that enhances
Vasari's position at the forefront of choral singing in his country.
American Record Guide, November/ December 2005
A choral concert cum silver anniversary party as the
Vasaris, a British choir of 30, celebrate their 25th year of artistic life
with 12 world premiere recordings, nine of them commissioned especially
for the occasion. The works are sacred, all designed for use at Evensong.
Choral artistry, it comes as no surprise, is exceptional - this has always
been a first-class outfit - and there's new music worth hearing as well.
Jonathan Dove's 'Bless the Lord', with its organ fanfares creating some
brilliant flashes of light, is a winner, as are Jonathan Rathbone's
achingly sad 'Absalom' and James MacMillan's absorbing take on the
emotional implications of the Annunciation. MacMillan really gives the
singers a chance to shine. Listen to how they dig into the haunting text
from Michael Symmons Roberts's 'Her Maker's Maker'. Will Todd's wordless
'Angel Song' offers moments of quiet ecstasy, while Ward Swingle's
graceful 'Give us This Day' acts as a final blessing on the whole
endeavour. Yes, there are some snoozers interspersed with the rest, but
nothing's that bad, and the Vasaris are always worth a listen. For choral
aficionados, this might be a nice opportunity to check out some new
repertoire.