Concert Review: Duruflé Requiem by Candlelight, Saturday 6th February 2016

Chamber Choir Requiem concert shows the way

One of the delights of concerts by the St Albans Chamber Choir is that musical director John Gibbons frequently springs surprises.

Often it is a performance of a work by a little-known composer or a neglected work by a well-known one and occasionally he puts his own twist into something with outstanding results.

Saturday’s concert by the choir at St Peter’s Church in St Albans was full of all three starting with Charles Villiers Stanford’s wonderful and all-too-rarely performed unaccompanied Magnificat for Double Choir, a powerful and joyous work which made a fitting start to a concert where the first half was made up mainly of 20th century English music.

The choir followed with the setting of Psalm 130 – Out of the depths I cry unto thee – by the little known English composer George Lloyd.

At the heart of the work is a stunning soprano solo, delightfully sung by Joanne Scott.

Yet another little-known English composer is Edmund Rubbra and here John Gibbons introduced his own twist to the composer’s Song of the Soul.

Normally performed with just an organ accompaniment, John added a cello part to Saturday’s performance which was exquisitely played by Michael Wigram.

The first half ended with Parry’s At the Round Earth’s Imagined Corners from his Songs of Farewell, a fine and moving work well handled by the choir.

A feature of the first half of the programme was two short organ solos by St Albans Cathedral Organ Scholar Nicholas Freestone with Herbert Howells’ Master Tallis’s Testament and In Paradisum by the French organist Jean-Yves Daniel- Lesur.

The main work of the evening was Maurice Duruflé’s Requiem.

While the work itself is undoubtedly a masterpiece, the all-too-brief Pie Jesu which lies at its heart is its absolute highlight and on Saturday its performance by mezzo soprano Helen Charlston accompanied by Nicholas Freestone and Michael Wigram was, for me, the pinnacle of  the entire evening.

Helen, former head chorister of the St Albans Abbey Girls’ Choir and founder of Amici Voices, together with the two instrumentalists, produced one of those spine-tingling moments which will stay with me for a long time.

The tenor solo in the Requiem was sung by Andrew Shepstone.

JOHN MANNING, Herts Advertiser, February 2016

Duruflé Requiem by Candlelight: Saturday 6th February 2016

Next Concert – Saturday 6 February 7.30pm

St Peter’s Church
St Albans
AL1 3HG

Stanford Magnificat for double choir
Rubbra   Song of the Soul
and works by Hubert Parry and George Lloyd

John Gibbons conductor

Nicholas Freestone organ

Helen Charlston mezzo-soprano

Andrew Shepstone baritone

In his 1947 Requiem, Maurice Duruflé blended themes from the Gregorian plainchant Mass of the Dead with mid-20th century rhythms and harmonies to create a work of great spiritual intensity. His consummate skills as an organist are demonstrated in the accompaniment, which fully matches the calm and meditative character of the vocal parts.

Duruflé’s masterpiece will be complemented by four 20th century works of English mysticism: Charles Villiers Stanford’s Magnificat for double choir, George Lloyd’s powerful and lyrical setting of Psalm 130, Edmund Rubbra’s Song of the Soul, a 1952 composition of great beauty and spiritual depth, and Hubert Parry’s At the Round Earth’s Imagined Corners, from his seven Songs of Farewell (1918).

For this performance, the Choir will be accompanied by organist Nicholas Freestone, with mezzo-soprano  Helen Charlston and baritone Andrew Shepstone, and directed by the Choir’s informative and charismatic conductor, John Gibbons.

Tickets £14 (£1 child/student)
Tel 07570 454744 or email tickets@stalbanschamberchoir.org.uk
or online at allaboutstalbans