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Herbert Howells (1892-1983)
Long, Long Ago
Performance details
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Sally Beamish (b. 1956)
In the stillness
About the work
In the stillness sets a contemporary Christmas text by Katrina Shepherd. Beamish writes: “This short carol beautifully captures the hushed rapture of a small parish church in a snowbound landscape, just before Christmas.” She treats Shepherd’s words with aptly simple, strophic, music filled with subtle shifts to reflect the text. Towards the end of the first verse, Beamish modulates from G major down to C major to shift the singers lower in their range, painting an even more vivid picture of the choir which “softly sings” at the start of the second verse. Where Shepherd breaks the poem’s pattern in the penultimate line, Beamish introduces a new melody, paralleling the shift in the text.
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Michael Praetorius (1571-1621)
Es ist ein Ros entsprungen
About the work
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Translation
Joanna Marsh (b. 1970)
In Winter’s House
About the work
Joanna Marsh’s choral setting of Jane Draycott’s poem “In Winter’s House” was commissioned by Tenebrae as a companion piece to A Ceremony of Carols by Benjamin Britten. The vocal range of the piece sits quite low, calling for an ensemble of altos, tenors, baritones, and basses, which adds to the imagery of a dark, winter scene so beautifully depicted in Draycott’s poem. There is no set, consistent meter, which adds a freedom to the textual expression of the piece. Text painting is used frequently —the sparse, low harmonies on the text “cold as steel,” a stunning high F major triad on the word “gleams,” and the descending, lilting melody on the word “rain” are just a few examples.
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Rebecca Clarke (1886-1979)
Ave Maria
About the work
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Translation
Reena Esmail (b. 1983)
A Winter Breviary
About the work
1. We Look For You (Evensong — Raag Hamsadhwani)
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2. The Year’s Midnight (Matins — Raag Malkauns)
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3. The Unexpected Early Hour (Lauds — Raag Ahir Bhairav)
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Intermission 15m
Herbert Howells (1892-1983)
Three Carol-Anthems
Performance details
About the work
1. Here is the Little Door
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2. A Spotless Rose
By far the most celebrated of the Three Carol-Anthems, this movement uses Winkworth’s translation of the German text famously set by Michael Praetorius. (We performed that version in the first half of this evening’s program.) He evokes the wind which blows the proverbial spotless rose in the text with long, smoothly flowing lines through time-changes that the Royal School of Church Music says “confounded the choir of King’s Cambridge in early performances.” In the second verse, the ‘wind’ calms to make room for a soaring baritone solo before it picks back up in the final verse. The flowing slows once more for one of the most beloved moments in Howells’s oeuvre: a closing phrase, of which composer Patrick Hadley famously told Howells, “I should like, when my time comes, to pass away with that magical cadence.”
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3. Sing Lullaby
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Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)
1. Weihnachten
from Sechs Spruche, Op. 79
About the work
Weihnachten comes from his Six Motets, Op. 79. While the motets were published posthumously in 1850, the pieces were written between 1843-1846, with Weihnachten written in 1845, two years before his death. The piece is written for eight-part choir, and he sets the “hallelujahs” in an antiphonal, double-choir setting. This exuberant setting reflects the text, rejoicing in the coming of the promised Redeemer.
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David Briggs (b. 1962)
Set me as a seal
About the work
Written for a wedding in 2011, Briggs’s Set me as a seal is an impassioned setting of this oft-used love text. He builds drama throughout by starting with all voices together, and interrupting the homophony with smaller sections of the choir passing the text back-and-forth until they return to each other at the peak of the phrase. The piece winds through key areas with an impressive ease, flowing much like the “many waters” of the text, before settling in a distant F-sharp major.
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Morten Lauridsen (b. 1943)
O magnum mysterium
About the work
Morten Lauridsen is one of the most widely performed choral composers alive today. He served as composer-in-residence for the Los Angeles Master Chorale from 1994 to 2001, and taught at the USC Thornton School of Music from 1967-2019. Lauridsen was named an “American Choral Master” by the National Endowment for the Arts, and received a National Medal of Arts from the president for his contributions to the choral arts.
One of the most captivating and well-known choral pieces by a living composer, Morten Lauridsen’s O Magnum Mysterium is a serene setting of a common Christmas text, perfectly depicting the “great mystery” of Jesus’s birth. The piece, written for the L.A. Master Chorale, is filled with examples of text-painting, though its most striking use comes on the word ‘virgo’. Lauridsen writes here a note outside of the key–a G-sharp in the alto, the only note of this sort in the entire piece–used very specifically in this instance to foreshadow the Virgin Mary’s pain at her son’s crucifixion years after his birth.
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Traditional German, arr. Stefan Claas (b. 1950)
Maria durch ein Dornwald ging
About the work
Born in Bayreuth, Stefan Claas studied church music and choral conducting in Munich and Frankfurt. He was conductor of the chamber choir Ars Antiqua Aschaffenburg, winning several prizes and competitions nationally and internationally alongside them. In 2012, they won the City of Aschaffenburg’s Culture Prize for their exemplary work with young talent.
Maria durch ein Dornwald ging is a German Christmas carol of murky origins, first published no later than 1850. Stefan Claas’s setting of his home country’s carol sets three verses, first featuring just the tenors and basses, then only the sopranos and altos, and finally the full choir in the last verse. This final verse begins in unison, gradually peeling off into a robust major chord on the Greek liturgical phrase “Kyrie eleison”–”Lord, have mercy.”
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Ken Burton (b. 1970)
Many are the Wonders (Reflection on Tallis’ ‘Loquebantur’)
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