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Handel and Haydn Society: The Old Colony Collection (24/96 FLAC)

Handel and Haydn Society: The Old Colony Collection (24/96 FLAC)
Handel and Haydn Society: The Old Colony Collection (24/96 FLAC)

HiRes FLAC

Composer: Charles Avison, Brian Chapple, George Frideric Handel, James Kent, Thomas Linley, Felix Mendelssohn, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Samuel Webbe the older, Samuel Webbe the younger
Performer: David McFerrin, Emily Marvosh, Douglas Dodson, Jonas Budris, Woodrow Bynam, Ian Watson, Guy Fishman, Stefan Reed, Sonja DuToit Tengblad, Margot Rood
Orchestra: Handel and Haydn Society
Conductor: Harry Christophers
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Coro
Catalogue: COR16145
Release: 2016
Size: 1.09 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes

01. Kent: Hear My Pray’r, O God
02. Linley: Bow down Thine ear, O Lord
03. Avison: Sound the loud timbrel
04. Chapple: I Waited Patiently for the Lord
05. Webbe the younger: When Winds Breathe Soft in E-Flat Major
06. Chapple: It is a Good Thing to Give Thanks Unto the Lord
07. anon.: Hark! The Vesper Hymn is Stealing
08. Handel: Messiah, HWV 56: No. 31, He Was Cut Off – No. 32, But Thou Didst Not Leave – No. 33, Lift Up Your Heads
09. Chapple: O Come, Let us Sing Unto the Lord
10. Mozart: Almighty God When Round Thy Shrine (Adapted from “O Isis und Osiris” from “The Magic Flute, K. 620)
11. Kent: 12 Anthems: No. 12, Who is This That Cometh from Edom?
12. Handel: Israel in Egypt, HWV 54: No. 17, Moses and the Children of Israel – No. 35, The Lord Shall Reign – No. 36, For the Horse of Pharaoh – No. 38, And Miriam, the Prophetess – No. 39, Sing Ye to the Lord
13. Mendelssohn: Peace I Leave with You, WoO 5

Whilst the names James Kent, Charles Avison or Samuel Webbe may not be familiar to today’s listeners, 200 years ago these composers and their works were prized for their singability, their musical evocations of the text, and their beautiful sonorities. Rarely recorded, and some works never before recorded, The Old Colony Collection contains a diverse array of compositions that were sung on both sides of the Atlantic and includes anthems and ‘glees’ as well as selections from Handel’s oratorios, and arrangements of works by Mozart. The selection of works chosen for this recording features some of the finest examples from this fabulous and extensive anthology.

The installation of The Sixteen conductor Harry Christophers as artistic director of Boston’s Handel and Haydn Society has had happy results, never more so than on this collection that unearths all-but-unknown music perfectly suited to the choir’s style. Histories of American music will tell you about the conflict between the proper hymn style of Lowell Mason and the rougher homegrown polyphony of William Billings and his compatriots, but this ignores the fact that well into the 19th century a large majority of choral music performed in America would have come from England. Presented here are selections from a choral music publication called The Old Colony Collection, issued by the Old Colony Music Society of Plymouth, Massachusetts. Just as it has here, the Handel and Haydn Society was interested in this publication and in 1815 purchased copies of it for use in performances. The music anthologized is all from England and includes three types: religious verse anthems, secular counterparts to these called glees (from which the term “glee club” is derived) that are, as the felicitous booklet notes put it, “not overly challenging or overly simple,” and adaptations of oratorio and operatic selections. The last of these brings in works by both Handel and Haydn, but it’s the original music that’s most interesting. With the possible exception of Charles Avison, the composers have all been completely forgotten, but in the early 19th century they would have been familiar to both English and American listeners. They’re charming, with sensitive text-setting knitted together into simple ternary or verse structures. The small choir, accompanied by cello and organ, is perfectly suited, and Christophers coaxes sensitivity to the vocal line out of the singers. For a taste, try Samuel Webbe’s gentle and not unsubtle When winds breathe soft, with its text by the composer himself (although, you will learn, he claimed that he had found it “on a piece of paper wrapped around some trifling article procured at a chandler’s shop”). The music here is guaranteed to please, and it is to be hoped that the recording will lead to the reintroduction of some of this music into the American choral repertory. Idiomatic sound from the Church of the Redeemer in the Boston suburb of Chestnut Hill is the icing on the cake.

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