Parry: Orchestral & Choral Works / Jarvi, BBC NO of Wales

One of the most important Parry issues for many years, this is a credit to all the performers, not least the warmly committed conductor, Neeme JĂ€rvi, drawing the whole ensemble together.
â Gramophone [12/2012]
-----
A moving tribute to one of Britain great composers.
When I showed this CD to a friend they responded by suggesting that it would be right up my street. Unfortunately, this comment was barbed. âMy streetâ in this case meant âover-blownâ ceremonial music of the kind that uncritically lauded Empire, glorified war and insisted that the ârich man [was] in his castle, The poor man at his gateâ. Before the reader runs off with the idea that I am politically slightly to the right of Sir Oswald Mosley, I wish to make three comments. Firstly, Parry and Elgar were men of their time so their choice of poems to set and ideas to compose were different to someone living in the post-Colonial, âliberalâ and cosmopolitan society of the early part of the 21 st century. Secondly, not all âceremonialâ music is bad. For example, while I have never been a fan of Elgarâs The Crown of India, I do love Waltonâs coronation marches. By definition, this style of music tends to celebrate the life and times of the Royal Family or matters of âstateâ. However, it need not be âtub-thumpingâ or âjingoisticâ. Often it can be reflective and contain profound thoughts on mankindâs adventure. One need only consider the âCortegeâ by Cecil Coles - ideal for Remembrance Sunday yet full of the âhorror of warâ.
Thirdly, there is a tendency to present Parry as a caricature of a âToryâ squire who was into all the trappings of the feudal society. Nothing could be further from the truth. This is not the place to analyse the composerâs political or moral views, however it is fair to say that he was liberal - possibly even a âradicalâ. His religious views were typically agnostic in spite of Deliusâ suggestion that if he lived long enough he would have set the entire Bible! H.R.H. Charles, Prince of Wales has noted in his introduction to the CD liner-notes that Parry, in spite of his âhugely energetic personalityâ revealed a ânervous, melancholy, even depressive temperament which infuses the inspiring and noble sentiment of much of his music with a darker, complex hue.â
The listener to this CD will be surprised. In spite of the cover photograph of a grand royal procession, much of this music is introverted and deeply moving. Some of it may have been written to celebrate national or royal events - but all of it has a thoughtful disposition. There is nothing here for the âjingoistâ expects possibly the Prom favourite Jerusalem. However, this hymn setting has been accepted by people of all political persuasions and none as a great national treasure.
A good place to start is the setting of John Oâ Gauntâs verse England. This song has occasionally been mentioned in the same breath as the well-known Jerusalem yet they could not be more different in their musical nature.
The story goes that after the success of the Blake setting, Gilbert Murray, the classicist and Ernest Walker, the composer, asked Parry to make a setting of John Oâ Gauntâs famous monologue from Act II of Shakespeareâs play Richard II. (This royal throne of Kings, this sceptred island). There is nothing bombastic about this beautiful unison song. If anything it is undemonstrative and reflective, with a greater emphasis being on the final words âGrant, Lord, that England ⊠May be renownâd through all recorded ages / For Christian service and true Chivalryâ. Jeremy Dibble has noted that England is about more than just flying the flag - âits rousing tune expresses a sense of vision, self-sacrifice and hope, typical of Parryâs own outlook.â
Jerusalem is given a largely thoughtful performance here. This song, beloved by the vast majority of the nation, is usually heard in the opulent Elgar orchestration. The original Parry song has slightly fewer grand aspirations. The composer suggested that the first verse ought to be sung by a soprano solo with the second sung by âall available voicesâ. Formerly composed as a âchoral songâ with only a piano accompaniment, Parry orchestrated it right at the end of his life for a Suffrage Demonstration Concert on 13 March 1918 at the Queenâs Hall. My only complaint is the excessive length of the final word (Land) sung by the choir. This is at variance with my score of the work.
The nation collectively heard the Wedding March from Parryâs incidental music to the Greek comedy, The Birds by Aristophanes at the wedding of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge; it was played just before the arrival of Her Majesty the Queen. For Parry enthusiasts this extract had been available on Lyrita featuring Sir Adrian Boult and the London Philharmonic Orchestra. As far as I know, until now there has been no recording of the entire score. The present performing edition has been prepared for performance by Philip Brookes.
The Birds was produced by the Cambridge University Amateur Dramatic Club in November 1893. Jeremy Dibble has suggested that this music is full of âhumour and light-heartednessâ and notes that the score is ârich in artifice and inventionâ. I enjoyed it. I guess that knowledge of the Aristophanes play may be of some help to listeners but all these numbers stand well on their own account. I was especially attracted to the gentle Entrâacte, the cheeky waltz, and the beautiful Intermezzo. All these display Parryâs skills at musical design and orchestration at their best.
The piece that gave my friend the greatest cause for concern about political correctness was the short ode entitled The Glories of Blood and State. He must have imagined Parry indulging in some idealist âBrooke-ianâ âpro patria moriâ sentiment. Nothing could be further from the truth. This is an early work dating from 1883, written some three years after the composer broke the mould of dissipation in English music with his Wagnerian cantata Prometheus Unbound. This ground-breaking work probably does not represent the ârenaissanceâ of British music - just the realisation that it was equal to the German hegemony. The present work is a setting of a poem by the English author James Shirley (1596-1666). Charles Lamb summed up this writerâs career with â[he] claims a place among the worthies of this period, not so much for any transcendent genius in himself, as that he was the last of a great race, all of whom spoke nearly the same language and had a set of moral feelings and notions in common.â The funeral dirge from his play âThe Contention of Ajax and Ulyssesâ was regarded as a meditation on the fact that death is a leveller - kings and peasants are subject to the same laws of nature - âThere is no armour against fate.â The exposition of the music is excellent. There is a Brahmsian feel to this music that reflects Parryâs love of the Deutsches Requiem: Wagnerâs ghost has (almost) been laid to rest. Perhaps anyone still worried about Parry and his âtub-thumpingâ should meditate on the last line of the poem - âOnly the actions of the just/Smell sweet, and blossom in their dustâ.
Sir Henry Wood wrote in his fascinating My Life of Music (1938) that âone work we produced I thought was going to live - Parryâs Magnificat - but it has now dropped out of the concert repertoire. I have never been able to understand whyâ. It is a sentiment with which I strongly concur: I believe that the Magnificat is a masterpiece. It was composed for the 1897 Three Choirs Festival and was duly performed there on 15 September. It has one primary exemplar: Bachâs Magnificat of 1732-35; however, the listener will feel that much of the strength of this music is similar to the massive contrapuntal constructions of Blest Pair of Sirens which was completed ten years earlier. They may also consider that there are hints of Brahms. The work is conceived in five sections: the first and last being composed for soprano, chorus and orchestra, the second and fourth for soloists alone with the middle section being composed for chorus.
The listener will find this setting extremely satisfying for Parry has managed to balance his forces in a near-perfect manner. The âaggressiveâ parts of the text are balanced with exquisite introspective moments. Lyrical music is counterpoised with âcontrapuntal fertility and rich choral texturesâ. Some of the soprano soloistâs music is reminiscent of Brahmsâ German Requiem and certain passages have more of an operatic, rather than a liturgical, mood to them.
It is interesting that Parry drew the text from the Vulgate Latin Bible rather than use an English translation such as the Book of Common Prayer. It would be instructive to know why. After the first performance, Parry dedicated the work to Queen Victoria.
In 1911, Hubert Parry was commissioned to compose a liturgical Te Deum for the Coronation of King George V. This was in addition to the well-known anthem I was Glad. This work displays the âpageantry, ceremony and grandeurâ of an important national occasion. This mood was reinforced by the use of the same six trumpets that were required for the anthem. Yet throughout, a more serious note is struck: tenderness and solemnity are never far away. Parry seems to be well-aware of the more profound and numinous qualities of the Coronation Service. He weaves the well-known tunes St Anne and Old 100 th into the texture. This is now a âconcertâ piece: I do not believe that it could be used in the context of a religious ceremony - no matter how âhigh.â It is worthy and I find it both exhilarating and moving.
The CD is an ideal production. From the highly imaginative and packed programme eloquently communicated through superb performances. The sound quality is excellent. The liner-notes are exemplary, however that is only to be expected from the champion of Parry and Stanford, Professor Jeremy Dibble of Durham University.
When I look at the catalogue of Parryâs music and encounter works like the great Fourth Symphony, the delightful evocation of childhood in the Shulbrede Tunes and the celebration of the composerâs yacht in the âWandererâ Fantasia and Fugue for organ, I see a composer, who, far from revelling in any false âmy country right or wrongâ attitude was a thoughtful man: The Prince of Wales notes that he took âa wide interest in politics, the Arts, science and the most current philosophical discussion of his timeâŠâ Parry was a complex character: this complexity is revealed in this CD.
Finally, my friend was wrong. This is not a CD of âjingoisticâ music: there is no sense of âtub-thumpingâ or what current-day political correctness would find abhorrent. It stand as a moving tribute to one of Britain great composers. It is good that we are now beginning to appreciate that fact again.
-- John France , MusicWeb International
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Parry: Orchestral & Choral Works / Jarvi, BBC NO of Wales
Parry: Orchestral & Choral Works / Jarvi, BBC NO of Wales

One of the most important Parry issues for many years, this is a credit to all the performers, not least the warmly committed conductor, Neeme JĂ€rvi, drawing the whole ensemble together.
â Gramophone [12/2012]
-----
A moving tribute to one of Britain great composers.
When I showed this CD to a friend they responded by suggesting that it would be right up my street. Unfortunately, this comment was barbed. âMy streetâ in this case meant âover-blownâ ceremonial music of the kind that uncritically lauded Empire, glorified war and insisted that the ârich man [was] in his castle, The poor man at his gateâ. Before the reader runs off with the idea that I am politically slightly to the right of Sir Oswald Mosley, I wish to make three comments. Firstly, Parry and Elgar were men of their time so their choice of poems to set and ideas to compose were different to someone living in the post-Colonial, âliberalâ and cosmopolitan society of the early part of the 21 st century. Secondly, not all âceremonialâ music is bad. For example, while I have never been a fan of Elgarâs The Crown of India, I do love Waltonâs coronation marches. By definition, this style of music tends to celebrate the life and times of the Royal Family or matters of âstateâ. However, it need not be âtub-thumpingâ or âjingoisticâ. Often it can be reflective and contain profound thoughts on mankindâs adventure. One need only consider the âCortegeâ by Cecil Coles - ideal for Remembrance Sunday yet full of the âhorror of warâ.
Thirdly, there is a tendency to present Parry as a caricature of a âToryâ squire who was into all the trappings of the feudal society. Nothing could be further from the truth. This is not the place to analyse the composerâs political or moral views, however it is fair to say that he was liberal - possibly even a âradicalâ. His religious views were typically agnostic in spite of Deliusâ suggestion that if he lived long enough he would have set the entire Bible! H.R.H. Charles, Prince of Wales has noted in his introduction to the CD liner-notes that Parry, in spite of his âhugely energetic personalityâ revealed a ânervous, melancholy, even depressive temperament which infuses the inspiring and noble sentiment of much of his music with a darker, complex hue.â
The listener to this CD will be surprised. In spite of the cover photograph of a grand royal procession, much of this music is introverted and deeply moving. Some of it may have been written to celebrate national or royal events - but all of it has a thoughtful disposition. There is nothing here for the âjingoistâ expects possibly the Prom favourite Jerusalem. However, this hymn setting has been accepted by people of all political persuasions and none as a great national treasure.
A good place to start is the setting of John Oâ Gauntâs verse England. This song has occasionally been mentioned in the same breath as the well-known Jerusalem yet they could not be more different in their musical nature.
The story goes that after the success of the Blake setting, Gilbert Murray, the classicist and Ernest Walker, the composer, asked Parry to make a setting of John Oâ Gauntâs famous monologue from Act II of Shakespeareâs play Richard II. (This royal throne of Kings, this sceptred island). There is nothing bombastic about this beautiful unison song. If anything it is undemonstrative and reflective, with a greater emphasis being on the final words âGrant, Lord, that England ⊠May be renownâd through all recorded ages / For Christian service and true Chivalryâ. Jeremy Dibble has noted that England is about more than just flying the flag - âits rousing tune expresses a sense of vision, self-sacrifice and hope, typical of Parryâs own outlook.â
Jerusalem is given a largely thoughtful performance here. This song, beloved by the vast majority of the nation, is usually heard in the opulent Elgar orchestration. The original Parry song has slightly fewer grand aspirations. The composer suggested that the first verse ought to be sung by a soprano solo with the second sung by âall available voicesâ. Formerly composed as a âchoral songâ with only a piano accompaniment, Parry orchestrated it right at the end of his life for a Suffrage Demonstration Concert on 13 March 1918 at the Queenâs Hall. My only complaint is the excessive length of the final word (Land) sung by the choir. This is at variance with my score of the work.
The nation collectively heard the Wedding March from Parryâs incidental music to the Greek comedy, The Birds by Aristophanes at the wedding of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge; it was played just before the arrival of Her Majesty the Queen. For Parry enthusiasts this extract had been available on Lyrita featuring Sir Adrian Boult and the London Philharmonic Orchestra. As far as I know, until now there has been no recording of the entire score. The present performing edition has been prepared for performance by Philip Brookes.
The Birds was produced by the Cambridge University Amateur Dramatic Club in November 1893. Jeremy Dibble has suggested that this music is full of âhumour and light-heartednessâ and notes that the score is ârich in artifice and inventionâ. I enjoyed it. I guess that knowledge of the Aristophanes play may be of some help to listeners but all these numbers stand well on their own account. I was especially attracted to the gentle Entrâacte, the cheeky waltz, and the beautiful Intermezzo. All these display Parryâs skills at musical design and orchestration at their best.
The piece that gave my friend the greatest cause for concern about political correctness was the short ode entitled The Glories of Blood and State. He must have imagined Parry indulging in some idealist âBrooke-ianâ âpro patria moriâ sentiment. Nothing could be further from the truth. This is an early work dating from 1883, written some three years after the composer broke the mould of dissipation in English music with his Wagnerian cantata Prometheus Unbound. This ground-breaking work probably does not represent the ârenaissanceâ of British music - just the realisation that it was equal to the German hegemony. The present work is a setting of a poem by the English author James Shirley (1596-1666). Charles Lamb summed up this writerâs career with â[he] claims a place among the worthies of this period, not so much for any transcendent genius in himself, as that he was the last of a great race, all of whom spoke nearly the same language and had a set of moral feelings and notions in common.â The funeral dirge from his play âThe Contention of Ajax and Ulyssesâ was regarded as a meditation on the fact that death is a leveller - kings and peasants are subject to the same laws of nature - âThere is no armour against fate.â The exposition of the music is excellent. There is a Brahmsian feel to this music that reflects Parryâs love of the Deutsches Requiem: Wagnerâs ghost has (almost) been laid to rest. Perhaps anyone still worried about Parry and his âtub-thumpingâ should meditate on the last line of the poem - âOnly the actions of the just/Smell sweet, and blossom in their dustâ.
Sir Henry Wood wrote in his fascinating My Life of Music (1938) that âone work we produced I thought was going to live - Parryâs Magnificat - but it has now dropped out of the concert repertoire. I have never been able to understand whyâ. It is a sentiment with which I strongly concur: I believe that the Magnificat is a masterpiece. It was composed for the 1897 Three Choirs Festival and was duly performed there on 15 September. It has one primary exemplar: Bachâs Magnificat of 1732-35; however, the listener will feel that much of the strength of this music is similar to the massive contrapuntal constructions of Blest Pair of Sirens which was completed ten years earlier. They may also consider that there are hints of Brahms. The work is conceived in five sections: the first and last being composed for soprano, chorus and orchestra, the second and fourth for soloists alone with the middle section being composed for chorus.
The listener will find this setting extremely satisfying for Parry has managed to balance his forces in a near-perfect manner. The âaggressiveâ parts of the text are balanced with exquisite introspective moments. Lyrical music is counterpoised with âcontrapuntal fertility and rich choral texturesâ. Some of the soprano soloistâs music is reminiscent of Brahmsâ German Requiem and certain passages have more of an operatic, rather than a liturgical, mood to them.
It is interesting that Parry drew the text from the Vulgate Latin Bible rather than use an English translation such as the Book of Common Prayer. It would be instructive to know why. After the first performance, Parry dedicated the work to Queen Victoria.
In 1911, Hubert Parry was commissioned to compose a liturgical Te Deum for the Coronation of King George V. This was in addition to the well-known anthem I was Glad. This work displays the âpageantry, ceremony and grandeurâ of an important national occasion. This mood was reinforced by the use of the same six trumpets that were required for the anthem. Yet throughout, a more serious note is struck: tenderness and solemnity are never far away. Parry seems to be well-aware of the more profound and numinous qualities of the Coronation Service. He weaves the well-known tunes St Anne and Old 100 th into the texture. This is now a âconcertâ piece: I do not believe that it could be used in the context of a religious ceremony - no matter how âhigh.â It is worthy and I find it both exhilarating and moving.
The CD is an ideal production. From the highly imaginative and packed programme eloquently communicated through superb performances. The sound quality is excellent. The liner-notes are exemplary, however that is only to be expected from the champion of Parry and Stanford, Professor Jeremy Dibble of Durham University.
When I look at the catalogue of Parryâs music and encounter works like the great Fourth Symphony, the delightful evocation of childhood in the Shulbrede Tunes and the celebration of the composerâs yacht in the âWandererâ Fantasia and Fugue for organ, I see a composer, who, far from revelling in any false âmy country right or wrongâ attitude was a thoughtful man: The Prince of Wales notes that he took âa wide interest in politics, the Arts, science and the most current philosophical discussion of his timeâŠâ Parry was a complex character: this complexity is revealed in this CD.
Finally, my friend was wrong. This is not a CD of âjingoisticâ music: there is no sense of âtub-thumpingâ or what current-day political correctness would find abhorrent. It stand as a moving tribute to one of Britain great composers. It is good that we are now beginning to appreciate that fact again.
-- John France , MusicWeb International
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One of the most important Parry issues for many years, this is a credit to all the performers, not least the warmly committed conductor, Neeme JĂ€rvi, drawing the whole ensemble together.
â Gramophone [12/2012]
-----
A moving tribute to one of Britain great composers.
When I showed this CD to a friend they responded by suggesting that it would be right up my street. Unfortunately, this comment was barbed. âMy streetâ in this case meant âover-blownâ ceremonial music of the kind that uncritically lauded Empire, glorified war and insisted that the ârich man [was] in his castle, The poor man at his gateâ. Before the reader runs off with the idea that I am politically slightly to the right of Sir Oswald Mosley, I wish to make three comments. Firstly, Parry and Elgar were men of their time so their choice of poems to set and ideas to compose were different to someone living in the post-Colonial, âliberalâ and cosmopolitan society of the early part of the 21 st century. Secondly, not all âceremonialâ music is bad. For example, while I have never been a fan of Elgarâs The Crown of India, I do love Waltonâs coronation marches. By definition, this style of music tends to celebrate the life and times of the Royal Family or matters of âstateâ. However, it need not be âtub-thumpingâ or âjingoisticâ. Often it can be reflective and contain profound thoughts on mankindâs adventure. One need only consider the âCortegeâ by Cecil Coles - ideal for Remembrance Sunday yet full of the âhorror of warâ.
Thirdly, there is a tendency to present Parry as a caricature of a âToryâ squire who was into all the trappings of the feudal society. Nothing could be further from the truth. This is not the place to analyse the composerâs political or moral views, however it is fair to say that he was liberal - possibly even a âradicalâ. His religious views were typically agnostic in spite of Deliusâ suggestion that if he lived long enough he would have set the entire Bible! H.R.H. Charles, Prince of Wales has noted in his introduction to the CD liner-notes that Parry, in spite of his âhugely energetic personalityâ revealed a ânervous, melancholy, even depressive temperament which infuses the inspiring and noble sentiment of much of his music with a darker, complex hue.â
The listener to this CD will be surprised. In spite of the cover photograph of a grand royal procession, much of this music is introverted and deeply moving. Some of it may have been written to celebrate national or royal events - but all of it has a thoughtful disposition. There is nothing here for the âjingoistâ expects possibly the Prom favourite Jerusalem. However, this hymn setting has been accepted by people of all political persuasions and none as a great national treasure.
A good place to start is the setting of John Oâ Gauntâs verse England. This song has occasionally been mentioned in the same breath as the well-known Jerusalem yet they could not be more different in their musical nature.
The story goes that after the success of the Blake setting, Gilbert Murray, the classicist and Ernest Walker, the composer, asked Parry to make a setting of John Oâ Gauntâs famous monologue from Act II of Shakespeareâs play Richard II. (This royal throne of Kings, this sceptred island). There is nothing bombastic about this beautiful unison song. If anything it is undemonstrative and reflective, with a greater emphasis being on the final words âGrant, Lord, that England ⊠May be renownâd through all recorded ages / For Christian service and true Chivalryâ. Jeremy Dibble has noted that England is about more than just flying the flag - âits rousing tune expresses a sense of vision, self-sacrifice and hope, typical of Parryâs own outlook.â
Jerusalem is given a largely thoughtful performance here. This song, beloved by the vast majority of the nation, is usually heard in the opulent Elgar orchestration. The original Parry song has slightly fewer grand aspirations. The composer suggested that the first verse ought to be sung by a soprano solo with the second sung by âall available voicesâ. Formerly composed as a âchoral songâ with only a piano accompaniment, Parry orchestrated it right at the end of his life for a Suffrage Demonstration Concert on 13 March 1918 at the Queenâs Hall. My only complaint is the excessive length of the final word (Land) sung by the choir. This is at variance with my score of the work.
The nation collectively heard the Wedding March from Parryâs incidental music to the Greek comedy, The Birds by Aristophanes at the wedding of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge; it was played just before the arrival of Her Majesty the Queen. For Parry enthusiasts this extract had been available on Lyrita featuring Sir Adrian Boult and the London Philharmonic Orchestra. As far as I know, until now there has been no recording of the entire score. The present performing edition has been prepared for performance by Philip Brookes.
The Birds was produced by the Cambridge University Amateur Dramatic Club in November 1893. Jeremy Dibble has suggested that this music is full of âhumour and light-heartednessâ and notes that the score is ârich in artifice and inventionâ. I enjoyed it. I guess that knowledge of the Aristophanes play may be of some help to listeners but all these numbers stand well on their own account. I was especially attracted to the gentle Entrâacte, the cheeky waltz, and the beautiful Intermezzo. All these display Parryâs skills at musical design and orchestration at their best.
The piece that gave my friend the greatest cause for concern about political correctness was the short ode entitled The Glories of Blood and State. He must have imagined Parry indulging in some idealist âBrooke-ianâ âpro patria moriâ sentiment. Nothing could be further from the truth. This is an early work dating from 1883, written some three years after the composer broke the mould of dissipation in English music with his Wagnerian cantata Prometheus Unbound. This ground-breaking work probably does not represent the ârenaissanceâ of British music - just the realisation that it was equal to the German hegemony. The present work is a setting of a poem by the English author James Shirley (1596-1666). Charles Lamb summed up this writerâs career with â[he] claims a place among the worthies of this period, not so much for any transcendent genius in himself, as that he was the last of a great race, all of whom spoke nearly the same language and had a set of moral feelings and notions in common.â The funeral dirge from his play âThe Contention of Ajax and Ulyssesâ was regarded as a meditation on the fact that death is a leveller - kings and peasants are subject to the same laws of nature - âThere is no armour against fate.â The exposition of the music is excellent. There is a Brahmsian feel to this music that reflects Parryâs love of the Deutsches Requiem: Wagnerâs ghost has (almost) been laid to rest. Perhaps anyone still worried about Parry and his âtub-thumpingâ should meditate on the last line of the poem - âOnly the actions of the just/Smell sweet, and blossom in their dustâ.
Sir Henry Wood wrote in his fascinating My Life of Music (1938) that âone work we produced I thought was going to live - Parryâs Magnificat - but it has now dropped out of the concert repertoire. I have never been able to understand whyâ. It is a sentiment with which I strongly concur: I believe that the Magnificat is a masterpiece. It was composed for the 1897 Three Choirs Festival and was duly performed there on 15 September. It has one primary exemplar: Bachâs Magnificat of 1732-35; however, the listener will feel that much of the strength of this music is similar to the massive contrapuntal constructions of Blest Pair of Sirens which was completed ten years earlier. They may also consider that there are hints of Brahms. The work is conceived in five sections: the first and last being composed for soprano, chorus and orchestra, the second and fourth for soloists alone with the middle section being composed for chorus.
The listener will find this setting extremely satisfying for Parry has managed to balance his forces in a near-perfect manner. The âaggressiveâ parts of the text are balanced with exquisite introspective moments. Lyrical music is counterpoised with âcontrapuntal fertility and rich choral texturesâ. Some of the soprano soloistâs music is reminiscent of Brahmsâ German Requiem and certain passages have more of an operatic, rather than a liturgical, mood to them.
It is interesting that Parry drew the text from the Vulgate Latin Bible rather than use an English translation such as the Book of Common Prayer. It would be instructive to know why. After the first performance, Parry dedicated the work to Queen Victoria.
In 1911, Hubert Parry was commissioned to compose a liturgical Te Deum for the Coronation of King George V. This was in addition to the well-known anthem I was Glad. This work displays the âpageantry, ceremony and grandeurâ of an important national occasion. This mood was reinforced by the use of the same six trumpets that were required for the anthem. Yet throughout, a more serious note is struck: tenderness and solemnity are never far away. Parry seems to be well-aware of the more profound and numinous qualities of the Coronation Service. He weaves the well-known tunes St Anne and Old 100 th into the texture. This is now a âconcertâ piece: I do not believe that it could be used in the context of a religious ceremony - no matter how âhigh.â It is worthy and I find it both exhilarating and moving.
The CD is an ideal production. From the highly imaginative and packed programme eloquently communicated through superb performances. The sound quality is excellent. The liner-notes are exemplary, however that is only to be expected from the champion of Parry and Stanford, Professor Jeremy Dibble of Durham University.
When I look at the catalogue of Parryâs music and encounter works like the great Fourth Symphony, the delightful evocation of childhood in the Shulbrede Tunes and the celebration of the composerâs yacht in the âWandererâ Fantasia and Fugue for organ, I see a composer, who, far from revelling in any false âmy country right or wrongâ attitude was a thoughtful man: The Prince of Wales notes that he took âa wide interest in politics, the Arts, science and the most current philosophical discussion of his timeâŠâ Parry was a complex character: this complexity is revealed in this CD.
Finally, my friend was wrong. This is not a CD of âjingoisticâ music: there is no sense of âtub-thumpingâ or what current-day political correctness would find abhorrent. It stand as a moving tribute to one of Britain great composers. It is good that we are now beginning to appreciate that fact again.
-- John France , MusicWeb International