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              Songs of the Baltic Sea 
  Vaclovas AUGUSTINAS (b. 1959) 
  Tau Bet Kokios Sutemos Šviesios [5:21] 
  Mindaugas URBAITIS (b. 1952) 
  Lacrimosa [5:45] 
  Vaclovas AUGUSTINAS 
  Hymne à St Martin [5:04] 
  Peteris PLAKIDIS (b. 1947) Nolemtiba: Symphony for Choir [28:49] 
  Galina GRIGORJEVA (b. 1962) Svjatki: Choir Concerto [17:57] 
  Gabriel JACKSON (b. 1962)  
              Cantus Maris Baltici (2009) [14:01] 
             
            National Youth Choir of Great Britain/Mike Brewer
 
			rec. 26 August 2010, Chapel of Merton College, Oxford (Augustinas, Urbaitis); 28 August 2008, Chapel of Lancing College, Lancing, UK (Plakidis); 14-15 April 2010, Church of St Alban the Martyr, Holborn, London
 
                
              DELPHIAN DCD34052    [76:59]  
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                  This recital gets off to a rousing start with the setting by 
                  Augustinas of part of Psalm 139. Here is the typical and unmistakable 
                  sound of contemporary Baltic choral music. The harmony is diatonic, 
                  but its richness, derived from clusters and overlapping suspensions, 
                  is at once voluptuous and challenging. This opening piece shares 
                  with the following Lacrimosa an abrupt and unexpected 
                  ending, in the latter case an “Amen” inserted at the point in 
                  Mozart’s Requiem – liberally quoted – where death stayed Mozart’s 
                  hand. The music gradually increases in richness and tension, 
                  the Mozart quotation at once unexpected yet curiously inevitable 
                  thereafter. This particular jury is still out – but actively 
                  considering its verdict – on whether the ploy adds up to a fully 
                  convincing work of art, but the beauty of the notes is not in 
                  question. The third work on the disc, the radiantly appealing 
                  Hymne à St Martin, sung in Latin – Lithuania 
                  is a catholic country – is in praise of a “poor and modest” 
                  man who is eventually welcomed and honoured in heaven. The Saint’s 
                  essential goodness is beautifully conveyed by music which, though 
                  not simple, makes its effect in a simple way. This is crowned 
                  by alleluias placed at the end of each of the three verses, 
                  the last one bringing to a close this most touching piece. 
                    
                  Some years ago, in Riga, I chanced upon a series of volumes 
                  entitled simply “Latvian Choral Music”. CDs, beautifully sung 
                  by the Ave Sol Chamber Choir of Riga under their conductor Imants 
                  Kokars, have been issued to complement these editions. Works 
                  by Peteris Plakidis feature in this series, many of them arrangements 
                  of folk songs, and at least one of them, for all its short duration, 
                  a masterpiece. His Symphony for Choirs, entitled “Destiny”, 
                  is the longest work on this disc and is urgently recommended 
                  to all those interested in modern choral music. The words are 
                  by the Latvian poet Ojars Vacietis, and deal with the painful 
                  history of the composer’s homeland, and indeed, of the whole 
                  region. The first movement is a grim call to arms, though arms 
                  do not feature, so a call to steadfastness and courage is perhaps 
                  a better description. The second movement opens with horses 
                  and horseshoe images, which perhaps explains the rhythmic ostinato 
                  that accompanies the upper voices. The subject is once again 
                  courage in the face of tyranny. A ray of hope appears in the 
                  third of the work’s five movements as the choir sings of what 
                  “should have been” – “a song as bright as a flash of lightning”. 
                  The sweetness of women’s voices is to the fore here, the frequently 
                  encountered Baltic characteristic of wide-ranging vocal lines 
                  over held chords in the lower voices. The canonic effects in 
                  this movement are particularly beautiful and touching. The fourth 
                  movement is a busy scherzo, with canons again, a heartfelt, 
                  urgent plea for peace and freedom. The final movement is a hymn 
                  to nature and love for mankind. This is music at its most radiant, 
                  and some listeners will sweet and rich, overwritten, just too 
                  easy a way of closing the work in peace and hope. This is not 
                  my opinion. Indeed, though it may be too generalised, even fanciful 
                  a view, I feel that this kind of sentiment rather embodies the 
                  astonishing resilience, fortitude and fundamental optimism of 
                  the people of this region. 
                    
                  The two remaining composers are present under false pretences, 
                  but no less welcome for that. Galina Grigorjeva, Ukrainian by 
                  birth, studied in Odessa, St Petersburg and finally in Tallinn 
                  with Lepo Sumera, whose music, much of which is available on 
                  BIS, I cannot recommend too highly. She is now a naturalised 
                  Estonian. Her Choir Concerto Svjatki (“Holy Days”) 
                  is in six short movements and is sung in Russian. The texts 
                  are mainly of folk origin, and the music communicates with a 
                  simple directness that beautifully complements them. There are 
                  too many splendid moments in this work to describe here, so 
                  I’ll settle for the fifth movement, in praise of Spring. You’d 
                  expect this to be full of excitement and anticipation of new 
                  growth, and so it is, in a way. But the long, held drone and 
                  solo soprano whose line weaves in and out of the complex yet 
                  crystal-clear web of sound created by the other voices communicate 
                  almost as much melancholy as promise. It is a remarkable achievement, 
                  much enhanced by the assured performance of Charlotte Brosnan. 
                  Indeed, so accomplished are all the soloists on this disc that 
                  it would be unfair not to cite them all. Congratulations and 
                  much admiration, then, to Amelia Berridge and Rachel Spencer, 
                  sopranos; Stephanie Guidera, mezzo; Sarah Champion and Felicity 
                  Buckland, altos; Richard Bignall and David Jones, tenors; and 
                  Dominic Berberi, bass. The final movement of Grigorjeva’s piece 
                  is an enchantingly joyful Christmas hymn that closes with the 
                  same cry – “Slava!” (Glory!) – that began the work. When the 
                  choir performs this splendid piece in concert it must surely 
                  bring the house down. 
                    
                  The other “foreigner”, Gabriel Jackson, also contributes the 
                  outstandingly fine booklet notes. I greatly enjoyed his In 
                  the Beginning was the Word on the recent choral recital 
                  by Merton College Choir, also on Delphian, and this work is 
                  arguably even finer. He uses many features of Baltic style, 
                  drone-like held notes and chords, diatonic dissonance and clusters, 
                  with the odd special effect thrown in. But like Grigorjeva’s 
                  music, with its mixture of folk and Orthodox style, Jackson’s 
                  sounds nothing like Baltic music. Cantus Maris Baltici 
                  gives the disc its title. It was written for these performers 
                  and to complete this particular programme. Its texts are taken 
                  from writers from all three Baltic countries, sung in English, 
                  and closes with a fragment, in Latin, by Francis Bacon. Choosing 
                  a high point is once again difficult, but the third section, 
                  an extended meditation on the nature of the sea, is perhaps 
                  the most striking. The tonal language and seductively rich harmonies 
                  might put the listener in mind of several fashionable composers 
                  of choral music, but there is a philosophical and musical truth 
                  here that is more rarely achieved, and that at once provokes 
                  beauty and transcends it. This is outstanding choral writing, 
                  and when performed with as much wisdom, technique, life and 
                  joy as these young singers display under their inspired and 
                  inspirational conductor, it makes for an unforgettable listening 
                  experience. 
                    
                  William Hedley 
                           
                   
                 
             
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