Gramophone – September 2019

(singke) #1
gramophone.co.uk GRAMOPHONESEPTEMBER 2019 III

SOUNDS OF AMERICA

periodensembles,theOttawaBachChoir,
conducted by founding director Lisette
Canton, have combined with Matthias
Maute’s Ensemble Caprice from Montreal
in eloquent, persuasive performances of
Handel, Schütz and Bach. The two have
teamed up before, most notably in 2016,
when they played in Beijing and Shanghai,
and this is reflected in how easily they move
to the heart of the music’s spiritual message,
and how organically they integrate their
HIP knowledge in order to communicate
that message.
Their performance of Handel’s Dixit
Dominus also gets the young composer’s
precocious power and the passion of his
utterances. From the exuberant, rigorous
physicality of the opening chorus and the
clear enunciation of the singing, the choir
sing as if the words were actually being
listened to and reflected upon by an
engaged congregation.
The Canadian countertenor Daniel
Taylor’s sweet-toned singing of ‘Virgam
virtutis tuae’ is one of a number of lovely
vocal contributions, another being sopranos
Kayla Ruiz and Kathleen Radka’s exquisite
‘De torrente in via bibet’. There is splendid
instrumental work throughout, including
Jean-Christophe Lisette’s cello solo in
the ‘Virgam’. And the choir show their
virtuosity and staying power in the fugue
that concludes the ‘Gloria Patri, et Filio’.


One of the inest ensembles of their kind: the Jitro CzechGirlsChoirbringjoytothemusicofPetrEben


TheSchützsongsaresimilarlyvivid
andengaged,butevensothegrandeurof
Bach’smotetisstaggeringandmovingly
performed.Thesoundiscaptured
splendidlybyMontreal’sownATMA
Classiquelabelintheaudiophilespaceof
Saint-Jean-BaptisteChurchinOttawa.
LaurenceVittes

Eben
‘InHeaven’
LiturgicalChants.ChorusesonLatin
Texts.Catonismoralia.TenPoetic
Duets.AboutSwallowsandGirls
JitroCzechGirlsChoir/ Jiří Skopal
NavonaFNV6228(56’• DDD)
Recorded1995

An entire disc
running close to an
hour devoted to pieces
for girls’ chorus, either
a cappella or accompanied by piano or
organ, might seem like too much of a good
thing. When the pieces are by Petr Eben
(1929-2007), however, this is resoundingly
not the case. The five rather appealing sets
of choral songs gathered on this nicely
produced disc are diverse in character,
mixing the sacred and the secular, setting
either Latin (Catonis moralia, Choruses on

Latin Texts, Liturgical Chants) or Czech
(About Swallows and Girls, Poetic Duets).
Eben would have celebrated his
90th birthday this year and is still best
remembered as a formidable organist and
composer for his instrument, yet his output
of vocal and choral music is extensive and
impressive. The Liturgical Chants (1960)
are part of a sequence of sacred works
published in several volumes from 1955,
the present set comprising an Introitus,
Graduale, Evangelium, Offertorium
and Communio built around Psalm 29.
The music, as in all these pieces, is stylish
without seeming so, the brightness of the
girls’ voices at odds with the gravity of
the texts, yet it all works very nicely. The
same is true of the Choruses on Latin Texts
(1973; it is not explained why only the first
three are given here) and Catonis moralia
(1974-75), the latter setting third-century
texts based on Cato, the five movements
structured like a Baroque suite.
The Jitro Girls Choir are one of the
finest ensembles of the kind and their
performances are delightful throughout,
a testament to Ji∑í Skopal’s firm direction.
The two early-ish Czech-language cycles,
the Ten Poetic Duets (1965, with piano
accompaniment) and About Swallows and
Girls (1959-60) bring out their most joyful
singing, caught in bright if unspectacular
sound. Guy Rickards
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