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| Rutter
- Gloria and other sacred music - Reviews |
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BBC Music Magazine - August 2001
John Rutter's output of sacred choral works is
immense, and these vibrant performances amply demonstrate the qualities
that give the repertoire its lasting and popular appeal. The
pieces recorded here attest, in particular, to Rutter's success in the
United States. However, it is the irresistible inevitability of
these scores (representative of Rutter's style) and the sheer technical
refinement of the singing that will attract collectors.
In a magnificent rendering of the Gloria,
choir, organ and brass make a powerfully dramatic impact richly enhanced
by the splendidly reverberant Winchester Cathedral acoustic. There
is comparable brilliance in the similarly scored Praise the Lord and
Te Deum (which ends the programme) and the lush unaccompanied
choral textures of Come down, O love divine. The
mellifluous lyricism of pieces such as To everything there is a
season and I will lift up mine eyes reveal Rutter's more
intimate side.
Elsewhere, the musicians demonstrate Rutter's
consummate gift for sweetly harmonised caressing melodies that continue
to haunt the memory. The fluid clarinet-playing in The Lord is
my light and my salvation and the glowing radiance of Thy perfect
love are just two such instances in a concert that will bring
widespread comfort and joy.
Nicholas Rast
Performance: *****
Sound: *****
+ BBC Music Magazine's symbol for performances of outstanding quality |
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| Gramophone - August 2001
This superb disc contains a balanced cross-section of
John Rutter's sacred choral music, spanning over a quarter century and
featuring several first recordings. Dedicated to the memory of his
son, Christopher - tragically killed in a street accident in Cambridge
earlier this year - it contains a selection of largely contemplative
pieces framed by two 'heavyweight' works, with accompaniments for organ,
brass and percussion. Beware the unwary listener who sets the
volume control too high - the blistering brass which open the Gloria will
tear you from your seat!
Rutter's stylistic hallmarks are all here: an
unfailing knack to get to the root of the text, exquisitely balanced
vocal writing, melting harmonies, intensely sweet turns of phrase
(sometimes over saccharine), short ecstatic climaxes, but also a
willingness to be astringent, and rhythmically powerful. There are
nods to pageantry, for example in the conclusion of the Gloria with
its Waltonian swagger, some deliciously echt Sullivan at the end
of the Te Deum and, in I my Best-beloved's am, an
occasional vision of the neo-Byzantine sound-world of his fellow
Highgate School pupil, John Tavener.
The artistry of the 25 full-bodied voices of Polyphony
is beyond reproach, only suffering a deficit in sheer volume when pitted
against the full fury of the Wallace Collection. Sumptuously
recorded in Winchester Cathedral (for the brass items) and All Saints
Tooting (for the orchestra and a cappella pieces), all the forces
involved play to perfection. Greatly enjoyable and strongly
recommended.
Malcolm Riley
EDITOR'S CHOICE - Delicious performances of Rutter's
wonderfully approachable and finely crafted vocal writing. The
sound, too, is outstanding. |
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| Amazon.co.uk - July 2001
As demonstrated on Rutter-Gloria and other Sacred
Music, John Rutter is what happens when you mix some Fauré, Walton,
Britten and touch of Sondheim in a bowl and simmer gently. It's no
recipe for credibility among the front ranks of contemporary music. But
as often happens with composers who shop around for inspiration, the
result turns out to be something oddly personal. Rutter writes with
elegance and clarity and a melodic gift exactly suited to his purpose,
which is almost always choral music. And this is the second disc which
Stephen Layton's outstanding professional choir, Polyphony, has devoted
to his work. The pieces here are of a lesser calibre than on the first
Choral Works but notable for a striking, macaronic adaptation of the
Francis Quarles text "I my Best-Beloved's am", as well as the
haunting beauty of the biblical "To everything there is a
season". And it's hard not to enjoy the sheer, bare-faced bravura
of the way the Gloria out-Waltons Walton. To hear this music is to
understand how Rutter has effectively become in-house composer to the
Anglican Communion.
Michael White
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| International Record Review
This ample anthology, poignantly dedicated to the
memory of the composer's son, opens with a triumphantly exuberant
performance of the Gloria, which deservedly remains one of John Rutter's
most popular works. Polyphony not only perfectly complement the
instrumental sparks of the outer movements, but give an extremely
sensitive rendition of the reflective middle section. The Te Deum, which
inhabits a similar sound-world, is given an equally impressive
performance. Come down, O Love divine, a lyrical, ardent work which at
times suggests Britten, is a very impressive achievement indeed,
beautifully written and sublimely sung.
Also decidedly effective is I my Best-Beloved's am,
which gains its distinctive character from its plainsong inflexions. I
cannot be so enthusiastic about Lord, make me an instrument of Thy
peace, whose use of stylistic cliché (Sondheim and Mahler, as the
composer has affirmed) imparts a soupy sentimentality to St Francis of
Assisi's text, and I have similar reservations about To everything there
is a season. This is the kind of writing for which Rutter is famous, of
course, but there's no getting around the fact that you either love it
or loathe it. Appropriately enough for an American commission, there is
something of a Copland-like sense of space about I will life up mine
eyes, but once again its lyrical qualities, its technical competence
(and impressive orchestral introduction) do not quite compensate for its
predictable inoffensiveness. For those who admire Rutter's work, this
disc, performed as it is in such an exemplary fashion, will be a
festival.
For those who, like myself, have reservations, it will
nevertheless offer excellent performances of two of his best ceremonial
pieces and, in Come down, O Love divine and I my Best-Beloved's am,
introduce aspects of the composer's work that are less familiar and
reveal, in greater measure, his very great gifts.
Ivan Moody
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