What a beautifully crafted disc this is – not just in its quality (and
it really is Trinity at their absolute best) but also in its shape and
programming. An all-Finzi recital sounds straightforward enough; but in
opening with the Magnificat and closing with the monumental anthem Lo, the full, final sacrifice,
Stephen Layton transforms it from a collage into a cycle. We move from
birth to death, Incarnation to Crucifixion, from the anticipation of the
Annunciation to the fulfilment of the Eucharist.
The composer’s secular music is also carefully folded into this
sacred narrative. The fragility and brush-away slightness of Finzi’s
Robert Bridges settings and the part-song ‘White-flowering days’ come
into their own here – portraits of a world already receding into the
distance, the Calvary Cross rising up in the foreground.
He may have given us concertos and anthems, cantatas and
chamber music but Finzi is, above all, a song composer. Trinity and
Layton never let you forget that in performances in which 30 voices sing
as one, where collective statements become private, lyric utterances.
There’s a lightness to the unisons (a recurring Finzi gesture) and an
organic, blossoming quality to the counterpoint that gives these choral
works a first-person immediacy. Which makes it all the more startling
when the congregation does burst in, reminding us where we are.
You have to hear the filmy, rhapsodic lightness of the Henry Vaughan
setting ‘Welcome sweet and sacred feast’ to really startle at the
arresting opening of ‘God is gone up’ (where the choir are joined by
Trinity Brass, led by no less than David Blackadder on trumpet) – a
trick Layton plays again by cutting from the brilliance of the lithe,
ecstatic ‘Wherefore tonight so full of care’ into the sober, muttered
darkness of Lo, the full, final sacrifice.
Finzi’s Magnificat famously lacks either a Gloria or an answering Nunc dimittis.
Rather than use Holst’s familiar setting of the latter, Layton instead
gives us David Bednall’s graceful 2016 setting. It’s a work with too
much of its own voice for straight pastiche, but which is absolutely
steeped in Finzi’s language – an affectionate, serious musical homage
that takes the composer as a jumping-off point for its own lovely
invention. Along with the beautiful cover art – an image of Gloucester
Cathedral’s Finzi Memorial Window – and excellent booklet notes by
Francis Pott, it’s just another bonus from this outstanding release. (Alexandra Coghlan / Gramophone)
Greetings. Would you re-up this one, please? Thanks.
ResponderEliminarplease re-up this one - thank you
ResponderEliminarPlease re-uplaod this gem. I thank you in advance.
ResponderEliminar