All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Mendelssohn: Choral Music
Mendelssohn: | Six Motets, Op. 79 Paulus, Op. 36: How lovely are the messengers Hear My Prayer Veni Domine 'Hear my prayer, o Lord', Op. 39 No. 1 Magnificat in B flat major for solo voices & chorus, Op. 69 No. 3 Herr, nun lassest du deinen Diener, Op. 69 No. 1 Surrexit pastor bonus, Op. 39 No. 3 Ave Maria, Op. 23 No. 2 Laudate Pueri, Op. 39 No. 2 Richte mich, Gott Op. 78 No. 2 |
Peter Holder (organ) St Albans Abbey Girls Choir & Lay Clerks of St Albans Cathedral Choir, Tom Winpenny Compared with large-scale oratorios such as St Paul, which includes the lyrical chorus How lovely are the messengers, Mendelssohn’s smaller sacred choral works were influenced by Palestrina, ranging from short liturgical motets such as the Sechs Sprüche to the canticle settings of the Magnificat and Nunc dimittis. The famous sacred melody ‘O for the wings of a dove’ is to be found in Hear my prayer. The fine choristers of St Albans Cathedral can also be heard ‘on sparkling form’ (Gramophone) in John Rutter’s Gloria (8572563). “on their showing here, St Albans Abbey Girls Choir can stand comparison with the best boys' choirs, even if their sound is slightly different...Throughout, great care has obviously been taken over words and phrasing. The purity and steadiness of the girls' voices are in themselves utterly delightful, but they do mean that any unsteadiness elsewhere stands out” BBC Music Magazine, October 2012 **** “The Three Motets for female voices and organ, Op. 39, are performed with a pleasing freshness...Best of all is the wonderful sonority of the eight-voice a cappella bookends, the Six Anthems and the setting of Psalm 43, Richte mich, Gott. And Winpenny's organ solo is of a comparable splendour.” Gramophone Magazine, October 2012 “The best known item here - Hear my prayer - is given a very committed performance that can stand comparison with almost any. Here and throughout the disc a listener unaware of the performers would be likely simply to assume that this is a traditional cathedral choir of boys and men...All in all this is a refreshing, enjoyable and well filled disc” MusicWeb International, December 2012 | | | (also available to download from $6.00) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mendelssohn: Motets & Psalms
Mendelssohn: | Hear My Prayer Gillian Weir (organ) with Felicity Palmer (soprano) Heinrich Schütz Choir and Chorale, Roger Norrington Six Motets, Op. 79 Gillian Weir (organ) Heinrich Schütz Choir and Chorale, Roger Norrington Beati mortui, Op. 115 No. 1 Gillian Weir (organ) Heinrich Schütz Choir and Chorale, Roger Norrington Mein Gott, warum hast du mich verlassen? - Psalm 22, Op. 78, No. 3 Gillian Weir (organ) Heinrich Schütz Choir and Chorale, Roger Norrington Veni Domine 'Hear my prayer, o Lord', Op. 39 No. 1 Gillian Weir (organ) Heinrich Schütz Choir and Chorale, Roger Norrington Ave Maria, Op. 23 No. 2 Gillian Weir (organ) Heinrich Schütz Choir and Chorale, Roger Norrington Warum toben die Heiden Op. 78 No. 1 Choir of King’s College, Cambridge, Stephen Cleobury Richte mich, Gott Op. 78 No. 2 Choir of King’s College, Cambridge, Stephen Cleobury |
Mendelssohn’s ‘Hear my prayer’ (or, in its English adaptation also known as ‘O for the wings of a dove’) is a much loved piece of ‘Victoriana’, made famous by, among others, Master Ernest Lough. Often sung by boy sopranos, it is here performed by Felicity Palmer, traditionally a mezzo, but using the soprano register of her voice here. She is soloist with the Heinrich Schütz Choir and Chorale under Roger Norrington, on an Argo LP which also contains the Sechs Sprüche (Six Aphorisms), a collection of short motets for particular days in the ecclesiastical year was written in 1845, the year in which Mendelssohn resumed directorship of the Leipzig Gewandhaus orchestra. The three sublime Psalms, Op. 73 are included (shared between the Heinrich Schütz and King’s College choirs) as is the brief but touching Ave Maria, written in Rome in 1830 and whose publication at the time led The Neue Zeitschrift für Musik said of it at the time that ‘the music sings so convincingly of the sanctity of Mary that it could lead a non-Catholic to her. ‘If issued as a pop disc Ave Maria would probably make the top ten’ wrote The Gramophone when this recording was first issued. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | The Flagstad Recitals Volume 4Songs for Sunday - Sacred Arias
Bach, J S: | Sheep May Safely Graze, from Cantata BWV208 Cantata BWV20 'O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort' First Publication of Stereo Version St Matthew Passion, BWV244: Break in Grief Cantata BWV147 'Herz und Mund und Tat und Leben': Jesu, bleibet meine Freude Bist du bei mir, BWV508 | Bortnyansky: | Jubilate | Gounod: | Repentir (O Divine Redeemer) | Gruber, F: | Stille Nacht | Handel: | Messiah: He shall feed His flock Messiah: I know that my Redeemer liveth Praise ye the Lord Sommi Dei! (Radamisto) Semele: O, Sleep Why Dost Thou Leave Me? Art thou troubled? (from Rodelinda) (previously unpublished) | Liddle, S: | Abide with me | Mendelssohn: | Hear My Prayer Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, from Paulus, Op. 36 | Parry: | Jerusalem | Wade: | O come, all ye faithful |
The fourth volume in “The Flagstad Recitals” comprises two LPs Kirsten Flagstad made with the London Philharmonic and Sir Adrian Boult in December 1956 (Bach and Handel: CD2) and April 1957 (Sacred Songs: CD1) at London’s Kingsway Hall. The Penguin Guide to bargain Compact Discs praised the ‘sacred pops’ CD for the ‘vivid projection’ of Flagstad’s voice and singled out the ‘great majesty and weight’ of her voice. As with the sacred songs, the Bach and Handel items have a devotional aura of their own and this anthology is also unique for the first stereo publication of Bach’s aria ‘Sheep may safely graze’ and the first-ever publication of ‘Art thou troubled’ from Handel’s Rodelinda. Some of the songs featured on ‘Great Sacred Songs’ made their way onto a 45rpm EP which was entitled “Songs for Sunday” – from which derives the title of this compilation. Flagstad’s own religious beliefs remain unexpressed in The Flagstad Manuscript – there are no pronouncements about morality per se or about the immortality of the soul. How she lived her life speaks for itself, however, and so do the performances on this CD: songs not just for Sunday for but every day. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mendelssohn - Choral Music
“Singing of an exceptionally high quality.” Gramophone Magazine | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | English Choral Favourites
Elizabeth Atherton (soprano), Matthew Best (bass) & Thomas Trotter (organ) City Of Birmingham Symphony Chorus, Simon Halsey (director) “…this latest album from the City of Birmingham Symphony Chorus mostly consists of the secular side of the post-Victorian English choral tradition, interspersed with several organ solos which are rousingly played by Thomas Trotter. …the singing is still distinguished by a high degree of accuracy in tuning, attack and unanimity of dynamic. These qualities are shown to their best advantage in the quasi-symphonic drama of Elgar's Great is the Lord, undoubtedly the highlight of the programme...” BBC Music Magazine, August 2006 *** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mendelssohn - Sacred choral music
“Outgoing, excitingly resonant, spirited singing” Gramophone Magazine | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mendelssohn - Sacred Choral Works
"The performances are robust yet sensitive… and the recorded sound is sumptuous. This is a triumph for Marlow
and his Trinity College Choir, for Chandos, and, above all, for Mendelssohn’s reputation as an inventive and
deeply rewarding composer of sacred choral pieces." International Record Review | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mendelssohn: Motets & Psalms
in ‘bend-it’ eco packaging | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Songs of Inspiration
anon.: | Come, Come, Ye Saints | Beethoven: | Hallelujah from Christ on the Mount of Olives | Bishop, H R: | Home, Sweet Home | Franck, C: | Psalm 150, M. 69 | Gounod: | Repentir (O Divine Redeemer) Ave Maria | Mascagni: | Inneggiamo, il Signor non è morto 'Easter Hymn' (from Cavalleria Rusticana) | Mendelssohn: | Hear My Prayer Auf Flügeln des Gesanges, Op. 34 No. 2 | Rodgers, R: | You'll never walk alone (from Carousel) The Sound of Music: 'Climb Every Mountain' | Strauss, J, II: | Nun's Chorus from Casanova | Verdi: | Va, pensiero (from Nabucco) |
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| |  | Exultate Deo
Andrew Arthur (organ) The Choir of the Chapels Royal, HM Tower of London, Colm Carey (director) The Psalms of David – sometimes referred to as the hymn-book of the bible – have inspired composers writing for the church through the ages. The vivid, poetical nature of the texts, arousing the full gamut of human emotions, has stimulated the composition of many great sacred works in Western music. The Choir of the Chapels Royal, HM Tower of London, directed by Colm Carey, was established in 1966 to lead and enrich both worship and liturgy in the two historic chapels within HM Tower of London. This new CD, Exultate Deo, creates a kaleidoscopic snapshot of music inspired by the Psalms, and is a captivating insight into the wealth and variety of repertoire sung on a weekly basis by the choir. | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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