Two works from the 
                  1980s take their place in the line-up of four issues in the 
                  EMI British Composers series this month. The theme is war and 
                  remembrance. Patterson’s Missa Brevis is an a cappella 
                  setting here deftly delivered by a large, precise yet emotionally 
                  communicative choir. The style is orthodox yet highly inventive. 
                  Try the Sanctus which has an ecstatic high-soaring line 
                  contrasted with a pecked out and swung bass motif. This impressive 
                  five section mass was originally issued in harness with Patterson’s 
                  1983 Mass of the Sea.
                
The major work here 
                  is Michael Berkeley’s Or Shall We Die? to words by Ian 
                  McEwan. This was written in protest against the potential for 
                  nuclear conflict. Heather Harper is in consummately entrancing 
                  voice rising to ecstasy against a spectacularly vigorous backdrop. 
                  The orchestral canvas is gruff and troubled yet not especially 
                  avant-garde. The style can loosely be related to Tippett in 
                  his most flowing mode and at times to the stutter and anger 
                  of Britten in the War Requiem. The brass are splendidly 
                  commanding as also is David Wilson-Johnson. It is good to hear 
                  both these voices again and especially Harper whose voice serves 
                  as both benediction and passionate exhortation. 
                
              
The sung texts are 
                not provided which is a pity as without the words we lose contact 
                with the detail of Berkeley’s and McEwan’s message. Its broad 
                thrust is however undimmed in a work that has not dated – the 
                music is too strong for that. I would rather like to compare how 
                the passage of years have treated another big piece from those 
                days: The Women of Greenham – if anyone has a CDR copy 
                of that two LP set.
                
              
Here 
                are two comparatively modern works leaning on the one hand on 
                protest and on the other on a choral legacy stretching back to 
                Byrd and Tallis.
                
                Rob Barnett