Britten: Choral Works RIAS Kammerchor & Justin Doyle

Cover Britten: Choral Works

Album info

Album-Release:
2019

HRA-Release:
25.01.2019

Label: Harmonia Mundi

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Choral

Artist: RIAS Kammerchor & Justin Doyle

Composer: Benjamin Britten (1913-1976)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

?

Formats & Prices

Format Price In Cart Buy
FLAC 48 $ 14.90
  • Benjamin Britten (1913 - 1976): Choral Dances from 'Gloriana':
  • 1 Choral Dances from 'Gloriana': Time 01:32
  • 2 Choral Dances from 'Gloriana': Concord 02:09
  • 3 Choral Dances from 'Gloriana': Time and Concord 01:21
  • 4 Choral Dances from 'Gloriana': Country Girls 01:08
  • 5 Choral Dances from 'Gloriana': Rustics and Fishermen 00:58
  • 6 Choral Dances from 'Gloriana': Final Dance of Homage 02:04
  • Hymn to St Cecilia, Op. 27:
  • 7 Hymn to St Cecilia, Op. 27 10:41
  • A Hymn to the Virgin:
  • 8 A Hymn to the Virgin 03:24
  • Five Flower Songs, Op. 47:
  • 9 Five Flower Songs, Op. 47: 1. To Daffodils 02:08
  • 10 Five Flower Songs, Op. 47: 2. The Succession of the Four Sweet Months 01:53
  • 11 Five Flower Songs, Op. 47: 3. Marsh Flowers 02:33
  • 12 Five Flower Songs, Op. 47: 4. The Evening Primrose 02:32
  • 13 Five Flower Songs, Op. 47: 5. The Ballad of Green Broom 02:09
  • A.M.D.G. (Ad majorem Dei gloriam):
  • 14 A.M.D.G. (Ad majorem Dei gloriam): 1. Prayer I 02:13
  • 15 A.M.D.G. (Ad majorem Dei gloriam): 2. Rosa Mystica 03:49
  • 16 A.M.D.G. (Ad majorem Dei gloriam): 3. God's Grandeur 02:58
  • 17 A.M.D.G. (Ad majorem Dei gloriam): 4. Prayer II 03:51
  • 18 A.M.D.G. (Ad majorem Dei gloriam): 5. O Deus, ego amo te 01:51
  • 19 A.M.D.G. (Ad majorem Dei gloriam): 6. The Soldier 02:12
  • 20 A.M.D.G. (Ad majorem Dei gloriam): 7. Heaven-Haven 01:24
  • Total Runtime 52:50

Info for Britten: Choral Works



Having dazzled the critics (Choc de Classica, the German Record Critics’Award) some 16 years earlier with its label debut featuringbest-loved twentieth-century English a capella works, the members of RIASKammerchor revisitone of their favourite composers, Benjamin Britten –this time,under the direction of the choir’s new chief conductor, Justin Doyle. A perfect occasion to discover his new reading of the composer’s enchanting setting of poems written in honour of the patron saint of musicians by W. H.Auden (he would later rename them ‘Anthem for St. Cecilia’s Day [for Benjamin Britten]’), alongside other choral settings comprising this glorious album entirely devoted to Britain’s greatest twentieth-century composer.

RIAS Kammerchor
Justin Doyle, direction



Justin Doyle
Justin Doyle is Chief Conductor and artistic director of the RIAS Chamber Choir. With a vast choral repertoire, Justin has conducted most of the best-known oratorios and hundreds of a cappella chamber choir programmes. He is in demand as a conductor of opera, and works regularly with orchestras. Recently appointed Gastprofessor in Choral Conducting at the Hochschule für Musik Hanns Eisler (Berlin), he is also an ‘International Visitor’ at the Sibelius Academy, Helsinki.

Justin Doyle is Chief Conductor and artistic director of the RIAS Kammerchor, Berlin. Born in Lancaster, England, Justin’s musical education began as a chorister at Westminster Cathedral, and a choral scholar at King’s College, Cambridge. He won second prize in the prestigious Cadaqués Orchestra Conducting Competition and was awarded the first Conductor Fellowship with the BBC Singers, with whom he continues to work. He has recently been appointed Gastprofessor in Choral Conducting at the Hochschule für Musik Hanns Eisler (Berlin). Justin is also an ‘International Visitor’ at the Sibelius Academy, Helsinki.

A regular guest conductor with Opera North, other recent engagements have included concerts with the Orchestra of Opera North, Royal Northern Sinfonia, Hallé Orchestra, Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin, Finnish Baroque Orchestra, King’s Camerata, Johannesburg Philharmonic Orchestra, New London Orchestra, Manchester Camerata, Sinfonia of Leeds, and Jersey Chamber Orchestra.

Justin has been Artistic Director of the Ryedale Festival and Swaledale Festival, and Principal Conductor / Musical Director of ensembles such as the University of Manchester Chorus, Haffner Orchestra, Essex Symphony Orchestra and Manchester Chamber Choir. His broad musical tastes have also led him to work with period instrument ensembles, collaborate with musicians from other cultures, arrange folk music from all over the world and conduct live orchestral film scores. His previous involvement in musical education includes the directorships of the Young Sinfonia (the youth orchestra of the Royal Northern Sinfonia, Sage Gateshead) and Opera North Children’s Chorus; in 2018 he works with the young singers of Genesis Sixteen.

Justin is in demand as a conductor of opera, in particular the works of Mozart (‘an evening of almost unadulterated Mozartian bliss’ Così fan tutte / Opera magazine), Haydn (‘hard to imagine this fizzing piece ever being better done’ L’infedeltà delusa / The Independent) and Britten (‘Justin Doyle and the Opera North Orchestra work wonders to dispatch Britten’s mischievous and miraculous chamber score with pungency and precision’ Albert Herring / The Times). He conducted Bellini’s I Capuleti e I Montecchi at Buxton in 2016 (‘The Northern Chamber Orchestra under Justin Doyle gave the best performance I’ve heard from them at Buxton; Doyle brought out the best in them’ / Bachtrack), returning in 2017 to conduct Britten’s Albert Herring (‘…a super performance under the baton of Justin Doyle’ / Mark Ronan Theatre Reviews). This season Justin conducts Offenbach’s ‘Fantasio’ at Garsington Opera.

His work as Chief Conductor of RIAS Kammerchor began with a critically acclaimed debut at the new Pierre Boulez Saal in Berlin (Monteverdi Vespers and Missa ‘In illo tempore’). He has directed the choir in recordings of Britten and Haydn for Harmonia Mundi, as well as released ‘Heritage – Treasures of Jewish – German Composers’ with guest artist Azi Schwartz, the Cantor of Park Avenue, New York City. As well as undertaking a major tour of Japan, Justin directs RIAS this season in concerts both in Berlin and in some of Europe’s biggest venues with diverse repertoire ranging from sacred Renaissance music to Handel, Bach, and Biber.

The RIAS Kammerchor (RIAS Chamber Choir)
has an artistic profile which is unmistakeable in its rich diversity and is received with enthusiasm all over the world.

Among professional choirs, the RIAS Kammerchor is a pioneer in the area of historical performance practice. Since its foundation, it has also been exemplary in promoting music of the modern era and the present day. Within the context of the tension between these areas, the choir's interpretations of works from the classical and romantic repertoires have acquired intensive musical speech with clarity of depth. The choir has grown decisively above all in the breadth of its range of stylistic expression under the direction of Hans-Christoph Rademann, who has been chief conductor since 2007. He has been able to build on the foundation provided by the work of his predecessors in this area.

A clear departure from the monumental style of Bach interpretation was already evident in Karl Ristenpart's project to record all the Bach cantatas, a project which unfortunately remained uncompleted. "Transparency as in chamber music" was Ristenpart's guiding principle. When Uwe Gronostay took over the choir in 1972, he continued to mould its sound with the ideal of a chamber choir in mind, giving it homogenous form with assured intonation and stylistic flexibility. He looked to partners in Europe such as Eric Ericson and his chamber choir for this new direction, introducing fundamental principles of historical performance practice into the choir's work. These were systematically developed by Marcus Creed, who succeeded in creating firm partnerships with specialised orchestras such as Concerto Köln, Freiburger Barockorchester, Akademie für Alte Musik, Orchestre des Champs-Élysées, also establishing an exclusive link for the choir with the harmonia mundi france label in 1995.

Numerous works of new music have not only had their premieres and first performances thanks to the RIAS Kammerchor, but have also been successively anchored in its repertoire and recorded in definitive interpretations. This aspect of the choir's repertoire runs like a thread through its history. The fact that choir music is re-emerging today in a wide variety of styles is also to the credit of the RIAS Kammerchor and its constant commitment to new developments in music.

The RIAS Kammerchor was founded by RIAS (Radio in the American Sector) in Berlin on 15 October 1948. Recordings for the broadcasting station's needs determined the choir's work during its first 25 years under Karl Ristenpart, Herbert Froitzheim and Günther Arndt. With the increasing availability of recorded audio media, the importance of public concerts and guest performances grew. Uwe Gronostay (1972–1986), who was elected honorary conductor by the choir in 2007, was responsible for this new orientation - he set up an individual series of concerts for the choir. His successor Marcus Creed (1987–2001) raised the choir's profile within the tension of the interplay between old and new music. Under his direction, the choir's international popularity increased as did requests for performances.

Daniel Reuss (2003–2006) shifted the focus to classical modernism and strengthened the choir's links with partners both at home and abroad. Since 2007, Hans-Christoph Rademann has been creating new emphases in the development of the choir's sound and repertoire. In December 2010, the British magazine Gramophone chose the RIAS Kammerchor as one of the top ten choirs in the world.

The RIAS Kammerchor is an ensemble of Rundfunk Orchester und Chöre GmbH (roc berlin.) The shareholders are Deutschlandradio, the Federal Republic of Germany, the State of Berlin und the Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg broadcasting station.

Booklet for Britten: Choral Works

© 2010-2024 HIGHRESAUDIO