Young British composer Rebecca Dale, the first female composer to
sign to Decca Classics, will release her debut album ‘Requiem For My
Mother’ on 31st August – featuring two major works: her brand new
Materna Requiem and her choral symphony When Music Sounds.
At the heart of Rebecca’s first recording is her Materna Requiem – a
beautifully moving and uplifting tribute to her late mother, who died in
2010. The work draws from both the traditional text of the Catholic
Mass and contemporary poetry and is a homage to parents everywhere. It
features the voices of soprano Louise Alder, tenor Trystan Griffiths and
young chor
isters Hannah Dienes-Williams and Edward Hyde (BBC Radio 2
Young Chorister of the Year 2016) alongside the Royal Liverpool
Philharmonic Orchestra. The work will receive its world premiere
performance at The North Wales International Music Festival in St Asaph
Cathedral on 22nd September.
Rebecca Dale says of the album: “It’s an amazing feeling to be
releasing my first album and sharing my music with everyone. The Requiem
is a very personal piece to me, and it uses melodies I wrote when I was
a child so you could say I’ve been working on it for most of my life!
When I first wrote the Requiem I didn’t even realise it would receive a
performance so it’s a hugely exciting moment to hear it on record, and I
hope the piece connects with people.”
The first track from Rebecca’s new album, ‘Pie Jesu’, is out now and
expresses a parent’s love for their son or daughter – so instead of
using a child’s voice as is tradition for this movement, it’s
represented as a father singing to his newborn.
The process of writing the Materna Requiem has been somewhat
cathartic for Rebecca – she describes the musical tribute to her mother
as “a way for me to build a bridge back to her”. Rebecca is keen to help
others who have suffered the loss of a parent and is a supporter of
Winston’s Wish – the UK’s first childhood bereavement charity. Donation
buckets will be available at the premiere performance of the work, plus
Rebecca will be taking part in ‘TrekFest’ for the charity.
Rebecca’s work first came to public attention when BBC Radio 3
premiered her choral symphony ‘When Music Sounds’ in 2014 and the track,
‘I’ll Sing’, went to No.1 on the Classical iTunes chart. It seems
fitting that the whole piece is recorded on her debut album. Performed
by the Cantus Ensemble – one of London’s leading chamber choirs – this
inspiring orchestral work is a glorious counterpart to the Requiem and
concludes the album in stunning style.
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