Noteworthy Voices: Music for Epiphanytide

St Nikolas, Pevensey, Saturday 16 February 2019

It was good to welcome back Noteworthy Voices to Pevensey under their conductor Alexander Eadon. While to most of us Christmas is long gone the church’s calendar extends well into the new year and so it was not stretching things too far to mount a concert of a cappella music focussing on the scores created for the period immediately after Christmas Day.

Their eclectic programme ranged from early fifteenth century settings to the present day and ranged across the world for its sources. They opened with a group of English settings – Richard Rodney Bennett’s Out of your sleep, the quiet beauty of Britten’s A boy was born, the rolling cascades of Wishart’s Alleluya! A new work is come and the poignancy of Chivers Ecce puer.

We were then whisked back to the sixteenth century for Victoria’s wonderful setting of O Magnum Mysterium which was immediately followed by a more recent setting of the same text by Morten Lauridsen with its dense harmonies and superbly low lying ending.

Hymns to the Virgin followed with three modern works by Lennox Berkeley, Chris Chivers and Arvo Part surrounding the anonymous Ther is no rose of such vyrtew for high voices.

After the interval the male voices, positioned deep in the chancel, gave us the chanted phrases for the Magnificat, interspersed with improvisations for organ by Jean Titelouze dating from c1600, and played with convincing simplicty by Alexander Eadon. Mateo Flecha the Elder’s Riu riu chiu could hardly have been more different, coming as it did before Kenneth Leighton’s dark setting of the Coventry Carol. The section concluded with two familiar and beautiful works by Peter Warlock –Bethlehem Down and Benedicamus domino. The coming of the Kings brought the evening to a close with Philip Lawson’s Lullay my liking, the very familiar The three kings  by Cornelius – though on this occasion the solo voice almost disappeared within the enveloping warmth of the chorale – a traditional carol, Sing Lullaby, and finally, Jonathan Dove’s The three kings. This concluding item was somewhat disturbing. After the enthusiasm of so much of the music hailing the birth of Messiah and praising Mary, here was a setting darkly aware of the reality of the future for the family – the move into exile, the loss of status, the prophecy of death. It was a strange ending but none the less moving and effective.

Let us hope Noteworthy Voices return again soon.

 

Matt Geer: Organ Concert

St John the Evangelist, Hollington, Saturday 16 February 2019

Organist Matt Geer opened the new season of musical events at St John’s with a concert entirely devoted to transcriptions of popular works. A rousing Fanfare for the Common Man led into movements from Grieg’s Holberg Suite before the haunting beauty of Satie’s Trois Gymnopedie. The slow, almost languorous, pace was entirely in keeping with the delicacy of the writing.

The two pieces from Saint-Saens’ Le carnaval des animaux came as a complete contrast with the weighty L’elephant and the more serene Le cygnet.  Two familiar pieces by Elgar were likewise carefully contrasted with the Mendelssohnian textures of his Cantique and the triumphalism of the Imperial March.

As with the earlier Satie, Debussy’s La fille aux cheveux de lin was originally written for piano but its brief life here was effective before the more extrovert attack of Philip Glass’ Mad Rush. Although written for the piano – and there are a number of versions available on YouTube – this works remarkably well on the organ and never seemed like a transcription. The melodic development mirrors the opening scenes from his opera Akhnaten which is currently in repertoire at ENO.

The final section returned to Grieg with four items from Peer Gynt ending, inevitably, with In the Hall of the Mountain King.

A good sized audience greeted the performance with enthusiasm and the retiring collection was to be split between Water Aid and the church’s building programme.

The next concert is on St George’s Day, 23 April, at 3.00pm when there will be a recital by two professional harpists – possibly a first for Hastings?