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Easter Celebrations
April 2009
Birmingham Oratory
Celebratory night was a memorable musical treat
Last Saturday's concert must surely rank among the most memorable in
the Birmingham Bach Choir's distinguished history. Marking the birthdays
of Purcell (1659) and James MacMillan (1959) it celebrated both the
old and the new, and it was in fact the modern work, far removed from
what we perceive as the choir's traditional repertoire, which had the
far more resounding success in performance. Three Purcell anthems Rejoice
in the Lord Always, My Beloved Spake and My Heart is Inditing were rather
mixed in delivery, with solo groups puny at times in projection and
timbre, but with crisp, thrilling diction from the sonorous full chorus.
Paul Spicer's choristers responded well to the huge halo imparted by
the Oratory's acoustic, as did the dance-like delivery of the Orchestra
of the Swan, light yet full-throated, totally attuned to these theatrically-based
works, and persuasively eloquent in the famous Chacony.
And their resourceful string-playing made a huge contribution to the
impact of James MacMillan's Seven Last Words from the Cross, a score
of the utmost commitment which gratefully assimilates influences from
such as Tippett, Honegger and Penderecki into a tapestry of total conviction
and integrity.
The range of choral registers is huge in its exploration of extremities,
from growly, visceral basses to otherworldly sopranos looking down on
the scene. In fact the score is disturbingly graphic, as in the arid
textures of "I thirst ", and demands a sustained intensity which Spicer
encouraged with a moving submission to the power of its message, and
well-judged silences.
Overlapping layers of choral activity which had emerged in the last
of the Purcell offerings were here crucial elements of this reading,
and the message of the texts was delivered with awesome finality.
Christopher Morley
Birmingham Post
6 April 2009
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Easter Celebrations 2009
Photo © Andy Moon
Rehearsal
Photo © Merryn Lloyd
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