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Meditations & Remembrances - The Choir of Christ Church Cathedral Dublin

 
Meditations & Remembrances - The Choir of Christ Church Cathedral Dublin-Choir-Choral Collection
ID: SIGCD080 (EAN: 635212008027)  | 1 CD | DDD
LABEL:
Signum Records
Collection:
Choral Collection
Subcollection:
Choir
Composers:
POTT, Francis
Interprets:
APALAGHIE, Dan (tenor) | GANNON, Judith (soprano) | MULVEY, Aine (soprano / alto) | RUSSCHER, Tristan (organ) | STAFFORD, Gráinne (soprano)
Ensembles:
The Choir of Christ Church Cathedral Dublin
Conductors:
RUSSCHER, Tristan
Other info:

Described by The Times as "thrilling. contemporary, and original... impressive and profoundly affecting", Francis Pott's writing provides a treasure-trove of astonishingly beautiful composition. Meditations & Remembrances is a new collection of choral and organ pieces of extraordinary tenderness and masterly technique.

Francis Pott began his musical life as a chorister at New College Oxford. He held open music scholarships at Winchester College and Magdalene College, Cambridge. Francis was appointed Administrative Head of Music at London College of Music and Media in 2001, subsequently becoming its Head of Composition and Research Development on Music, Media and Creative Technologies. He was also a member of Winchester Cathedral Choir under David Hill from 1991 until 2001. Francis remains an active pianist and accompanist, uniting both compositon and academic research.

Christ Church Cathedral Choir enjoys an enviable reputation as one of Ireland's most outstanding choirs. Under the direction of Judy Martin, Director of Music at the cathedral, the present choir is a mixed ensemble of 20 adult singers. In addition to the full part it plays in the worship in the cathedral, the Cathedral Choir is active with concerts, tours and regular broadcasts.
Tracklist
 
POTT, Francis (b. 1957) 
1. A Meditation3:58
 play
2. Turn our Captivity [Psalm 126]13:18
 play
3. Kyrie from Massin five parts4:02
 play
4. Gloria from Mass in five parts6:02
 play
5. Jesu Dulcis Memoria4:50
 play
Introduction, Toccata & Fugue 
6. Introduction & Toccata7:03
 play
7. Fugue7:54
 play
8. Danctus from Mass in five parts2:36
 play
9. Benedictus from Mass in five parts1:36
 play
10. A Remembrance7:40
 play
11. Agnus Dei from Mass in five parts7:51
 play
12. O Lord, Support us all the Day Long3:57
 play

Review:
 

"The music of Francis Pott is rapidly gaining attention for its silky lines and sensitivity. The items that give the album its title, Meditations and Remembrances, are settings of the 17th-century thinker Thomas Traherne. One senses Pott's pleasure at painting the word "love" with such glowing warmth in A Meditation. He is well served by a beautifully tuned choir. The Osanna in the Five-Part Mass is light and crisp and Psalm 126 ends with the sort of melismatic Amen for which the Church was once reprimanded"
The Times

Choir and Organ *****
First comes the word and here we have a composer who has an implicit understanding and love of the text, which manifests itself throughout his music. Judy Martin is a choral director who has a perfect understanding of this relationship. She draws from the mixed-voice choir of Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin, in beautifully expressive and finely honed performances. This elegant and individual music gains its own momentum as it builds toward each climax. Choral works include the Mass in five parts, Turn our Captivity, A Remembrance and O Lord, support us all the day long. The composer's organ writing is represented by his stunning Introduction, Toccata and Fugue, which is given a first-rate performance by the cathedral's young Australian organist Tristan Russcher. Highly Recommended.
Shirley Ratcliffe

The Knowledge - The Times, May 2006 ****
The music of Francis Pott is rapidly gaining attention for its silky lines and sensitivity. The items that give the album its title, Meditations and Remembrances, are settings of the 17th-century thinker Thomas Traherne. One senses Pott's pleasure at painting the word "love" with such glowing warmth in A Meditation. He is well served by a beautifully tuned choir. The Osanna in the Five-Part Mass is light and crisp and Psalm 126 ends with the sort of melismatic Amen for which the Church was once reprimanded.
Rick Jones

Musicweb.com, June/ July 2006
My first encounter with the music of Francis Pott came through the superb CD by the vocal ensemble, Tenebrae, also on the Signum label, entitled ÎMother and Childâ. review www.musicweb.uk.net/classrev/2003/Aug03/Mother_and_Child.htm The two pieces included there alerted me to a resourceful and eloquent composer, an impression reinforced by subsequent hearings of a few other works by him. Now this outstanding new disc confirms that judgement.
At the heart of the programme is Pott's a cappella Mass in five parts. If that very title didn't tell you as much then the fact that William Byrd is mentioned no less than six times in the composer's introductory liner note confirms that the sixteenth-century master has been a huge influence on Pott's music, another acknowledged debt is to Kenneth Leighton. As Pott writes "·it is to Byrd, that venerable, artistically transcendent and yet vulnerably human face of enduring Englishness that I return·" In an inspired piece of programme planning the Mass is not sung straight through. Rather, other pieces are placed strategically round the movements. As Pott says, "the dispersal [of the Mass] to various points in the present programme alludes loosely to one's experience of the Mass in a liturgical context while serving a plausible purpose regarding tonal continuity between successive tracks." In fact, it's not stretching the point too much, I think, to imagine that the various pieces of music on this disc could all
A Meditation, an a capella setting of lines from Centuries of Meditation by Thomas Traherne (1637-1674) serves as a very beautiful introit in this context. Pott makes use of some gorgeous harmonies and the choral textures are radiantly clear. As we'll find throughout the programme, his responsiveness to words is natural and compelling.
Turn our Captivity is a setting of Psalm 126 for double choir with organ accompaniment. It begins in "mystical introspection", to quote the composer. Much of the music in the opening few minutes is quite intense but eventually the music subsides quietly. Then, at around 5:17, at "Then said they among the heathen", comes a much more agitated and dramatic section, with jagged rhythms propelling the music forward. The choral parts are very powerful and the organ is imposing and fiery. I did wonder at this point if the Dublin choir was just a little under-resourced on the top lines ö there are only six sopranos and four (female) altos, pitted against eight tenors and six basses. However, this climactic section is still well done. Then, at around 8:50, at the words "They that sow in tears shall weep in joy" an extended, quieter Epilogue starts to unfold, leading up to a spacious and very lovely "Amen", beginning at 10:50. This is a most impressive piece of music. Then we hear the Kyrie and Gloria of the Mass. The
Jesu Dulcis Memoria is a beautiful little piece, encompassing five verses of text. Each one is presented differently, with a lovely soprano solo ö well taken here ö the dominant feature of the fifth verse. The whole piece flows most convincingly, concluding with a seraphic 'Amen'.
The Introduction, Toccata & Fugue for organ solo is a most imposing creation. Pott makes clear that it's his homage to two French composer-organists, Jehan Alain and Maurice Duruf. The Introduction is powerful but only short, giving way to the dazzling, busy Toccata. This builds to a stirring climax after which the quieter, more reflective ending comes as something of a surprise. In the Fugue, which is tracked separately, Pott marries contrapuntal skill and technical brilliance. I detected ö or I thought I did ö several allusions to Alain's celebrated Litanies in the final four minutes or so. The last few pages, using the full resources of the organ, are hugely impressive and Tristan Russcher obtains some massive sonorities from the cathedral's organ. He gives a quite superb account of the whole work.
After this the quiet dignity and purity of the Sanctus and Benedictus provide an admirable and refreshing contrast. The 'Osanna' dances exuberantly. For A Remembrance Pott reverts to Traherne, setting more lines from Centuries of Meditation. He writes of this piece "The music seeks to preserve the sense of a quiet meditative centre despite a few expansive moments, and to maintain some consistency in its deployment of polyphonic vocal freedom against an organ part which remains both discreet and discrete." The result is a glowing piece that deeply impressed me. It's interesting, I think, that in his note Pott mentions that Gerald Finzi was another composer drawn to set Traherne's words. Although the musical vocabulary and syntax of Finzi and Pott are very different it seems to me that A Remembrance inhabits much the same territory of gentle ecstasy that one encounters in much of Finzi's choral music, especially the sublime Lo the Full, Final Sacrifice. The Agnus Dei accounts for about one third of the whole le
So, some marvelous, original and effective music by a composer who genuinely has something to say. The effect and impact of the music is all the greater for having been gathered into such a satisfying sequence. All the music was written for particular events or people and as Pott makes clear in his note, several of the pieces have deeply personal significance for him. Though the music is often not overtly emotional, as you hear it you feel it is, nonetheless, written from the heart.
The performances are splendid. The choir has been excellently trained by Judy Martin and they sing with precision, tonal beauty and complete conviction. The sound quality is first rate, as is the documentation. I am impatient to hear more of Francis Pott's music, especially his latest work, The Cloud of Unknowing, written for the Vasari Singers and premiered by them only in May 2006. It's excellent news that the piece is to be recorded by Signum next year. I can't wait. For now, this recording will do very nicely and I hope it will win a still wider audience for the music of Francis Pott. This is likely to be one of my Recordings of 2006 and I recommend it with the greatest possible enthusiasm.
John Quinn

The Church Times, 26th January 2007
"...The same kind of passionate commitment can be found in the music of Francis Pott, who began his musical career as a chorister of New College, Oxford, and later sang in the choir of Winchester Cathedral. "Meditations and Remembrances" (SIGCD 080) is an appropriate title for a recent Signum recording of his music, which follows on from the exciting performance by Jeremy Filsell of Pott‚s large-scale organ piece Christus, also on Signum (SIGCD 062, double disc).
The title of the disc derives from two lovely extended settings of Traherne, A Meditation and A Remembrance. There is some bracing dramatic writing midway through the anthem "Turn our captivity‰ (Psalm 126), and all the pieces on this disc share with Pott‚s compelling Mass in Five Parts an attractive gift for natural, easy-flowing, shrewdly engineered counterpoint, while embracing a warm harmonic range.
Most pleasing of all about this Signum disc is the unshowy and yet vastly proficient and thoughtfully balanced singing that Judy Martin draws from the choir of Christ Church, Dublin. An appealing soprano solo uplifts "Jesu, dulcis memoria‰ attributed to St Bernard of Clairvaux. Pott‚s handsomely varied Introduction, Toccata and Fugue for organ, played here by Tristan Russcher, may well encourage listeners to seek out Filsell‚s powerful recording of Christus."
Roderic Dunnett


 

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