It 
                mighjt be a matter of interesting debate 
                What are the most appropriate 
                forces to sing Parry’s Songs of farewell? 
                Here is a medium-sized, fresh-voiced 
                mixed choir of undergraduates, naturally 
                recorded, close but not too close, in 
                a comfortably rounded acoustic. Richard 
                Marlow displays My soul there is 
                a country as a work of measured, 
                lyrical contemplation. The crescendo 
                and animato at ‘O my soul awake’ 
                (tr. 1 1:24) illustrates how contemplative 
                the general atmosphere is but the real 
                reason for it is to wake up the listener 
                to focus on the slower, expressive setting 
                of the keywords ‘love’ (1:33) and ‘die’ 
                (1:39) realized in poised fashion. Marlow 
                enjoys Parry’s madrigalian feel for 
                word painting, as at the bastion picture 
                of ‘thy fortress’ (2:18), sopranos flying 
                the flag, as it were, on a sustained 
                top G while the other parts’ rising 
                emphasises the scale of the bulwarks. 
                I compared the recording by the Choir 
                of St George’s Chapel Windsor/Christopher 
                Robinson (Hyperion CDA 66273). This 
                was recorded in 1987, the same year 
                in which Marlow’s was published. Robinson’s 
                use of trebles on the top line makes 
                the expression more incisive, less smoothly 
                rounded and emotive than Marlow. This 
                in turn brings the structure more sharply 
                into focus, to neat but less subtle 
                effect. 
              
 
              
Marlow’s performance 
                of I know my soul hath power 
                is concentrated and quite surprisingly 
                intense, coming from Parry’s emphasis 
                of keywords through harmonic and dynamic 
                effects. The clarity and directness 
                of the smoothly stated, gradually opening 
                out ‘I know my soul hath power to know 
                all things’ to the beaming tone at ‘power’ 
                and thereafter, followed by the quietening, 
                chopped delivery and grey tone of ‘Yet 
                she is blind and ignorant in all’ is 
                typical of the faithful representation 
                of the antitheses throughout the poem. 
                Robinson’s slightly faster account, 
                2:18 to Marlow’s 2:31, makes for at 
                first more striking, starker, more dramatic 
                contrasts but Marlow’s more rounded 
                tone allows the poem’s message to resonate 
                more. 
              
 
              
Parry’s Never weather-beaten 
                sail is less clean cut, more troubled 
                than Campion’s original: music more 
                of mood than melody with ‘my wearied 
                sprite’, wishing to escape the body, 
                floating in the sopranos over the other 
                voices. Marlow goes for a softer focus 
                in the lower parts here whereas Robinson 
                more clearly shows the sprite leaping 
                in all parts. At the end of the first 
                stanza the appeal ‘come quickly, sweetest 
                Lord’ grows more urgent and climactic 
                from Marlow. The second stanza begins 
                more extrovertly with ‘Glory’ vaunted 
                and Marlow gets across distinctly that 
                this stanza is about the reality of 
                Heaven. 
              
 
              
There is an old 
                belief opens in a simple, flowing 
                style matching the comforting verse, 
                the voices hugging one another in convivial 
                imitation. For this piece Marlow’s smoother 
                delivery and lighter application of 
                imitation works better, I think, than 
                Robinson’s firmer structural emphasis. 
                And Marlow shows how spaciously ‘Beyond 
                the sphere of Time and Sin’ opens out 
                in sopranos’ high tessitura without 
                dominating. ‘That creed I fain would 
                keep’ Marlow gives startlingly direct 
                treatment. The alternative of ‘Eternal 
                sleep’ is considered expansively and 
                unflinchingly falling into oblivion 
                before the close offers the hope of 
                a sunrise on ‘waken’. 
              
 
              
At the round earth’s 
                imagined corners is unusually flamboyant 
                with vocal fanfares of trumpets and 
                vivid ascents of souls rising. This 
                makes the icy austerity of the spare 
                ‘And you whose eyes shall behold God’ 
                from Marlow’s female voices only (tr. 
                5 1:56) all the more telling. The harmonies 
                don’t soften till 2:38. As Donne’s verse 
                moves from the universal to the personal, 
                the stark unsentimental pleading of 
                ‘Teach me how to repent’ (4:51) is another 
                memorable feature of Marlow’s performance. 
                Robinson’s is more virtuosic and thrilling 
                but also more impersonal than Marlow’s. 
              
 
              
Lord, let me know 
                mine end is a dramatic psalm setting 
                which respects the tradition of chant, 
                not so much in repetition of music as 
                constant imitation, at the beginning 
                enhancing the calm, placatory manner, 
                later, as at ‘Take thy plague away from 
                me’ (tr. 6 5:03) magnifying the bitter 
                anguish. Marlow’s performance clarifies 
                the contrasts by distinguishing between 
                expansive measure and degrees of greater 
                animation. Spotlighting of the lower 
                voices is also effectively revealed, 
                as at their repeat of ‘ev’ry man living 
                is altogether vanity’ (2:01) and then 
                use of ‘vanity’ as a mantra, or their 
                very measured, monotone ‘I became dumb’ 
                (4:00). This is partly because Marlow’s 
                sopranos crown the texture more than 
                Robinson’s trebles but I feel Marlow’s 
                smoother contours suit this piece more 
                than Robinson’s greater formality. 
              
 
              
Stanford’s Three Motets 
                have a special place in the repertory 
                of Trinity College Choir as they were 
                dedicated to them. To Justorum animae 
                Marlow brings a calm opening yet strong 
                assertion as the crescendos climax at 
                ‘Dei’ (tr. 7 0:12, 0:49) emphasising 
                the departed souls are with God. The 
                stormy central section, ‘et non tanget’ 
                (1:27) is more animated but not markedly 
                so. It soon becalms for the luminous 
                coda (2:40). I compared the 1997 recording 
                by Winchester Cathedral Choir/David 
                Hill (Hyperion CDA 66964). His slightly 
                faster tempo, 3:10 against Marlow’s 
                3:48, together with trebles on the top 
                line, makes for a more searing radiance 
                and a more contrasted injection of venom 
                in the central section, but Marlow’s 
                more measured approach and less reverberant 
                acoustic reveals more details of the 
                part writing. 
              
 
              
Coelos ascendit 
                is for double choir so every line of 
                text delivered by one choir can be capped 
                by an Alleluia in the other. Marlow 
                makes it spirited but firmly articulated 
                so it goes with a fair swing. His performance 
                has at the same time strength and a 
                relaxed assurance, especially the closing 
                Amen. Hill’s performance is more dramatic 
                and outwardly celebratory yet Marlow’s 
                has an equally effective inner density. 
              
 
              
Marlow’s Beati quorum 
                via opens with the radiant purity 
                and sunny flow of female voices, two 
                soprano parts and one contralto, followed 
                by the gently affirmative response of 
                male voices, one tenor and two bass 
                parts. The second section, ‘Qui ambulant 
                in lege Domini’ proceeds smoothly but 
                purposefully with an effective slow 
                tiered climax from tr. 9 1:19 pointing 
                the seriousness of the latter text, 
                ‘in the law of the Lord’. Again upper 
                and lower voices again alternate, this 
                time with the call ‘Beati’ like a beacon 
                of a blessing cutting through a harmonic 
                haze like one of incense. The opening 
                returns in expansive line, from 1:57 
                on the first soprano imitated by tenor 
                and contralto before returning to first 
                soprano. Marlow handles this with ideal 
                breadth, space and humility, the ‘Qui 
                ambulant’s of the coda floating more 
                than previously. I compared the 1982 
                recording by the Cambridge Singers/John 
                Rutter (Collegium COLCD 107). This is 
                slightly faster, 3:21 against Marlow’s 
                3:50 and accordingly less tranquil. 
                There’s a firmer sense of structure 
                and control about the performance, but 
                for me Marlow’s balancing of the sense 
                of flow and contemplation makes the 
                motet come across as a more spontaneous 
                and satisfying experience. 
              
 
              
Eternal Father 
                is a sensitive, richly textured setting 
                which picks out key elements of Robert 
                Bridges’ poem on which to focus. The 
                first is on the address to the Eternal 
                Father, ‘To all men be Thy name known, 
                which is Love’ (tr. 10 0:43 to 
                0:54), achieved by the use of distinctive 
                harmonies and interchange of voices 
                and leading to an ecstatic close to 
                the end of the first section. In the 
                second the focus is on ‘joy’ (2:15), 
                this time more through repetition, but 
                quickly followed by a telling recognition 
                of ‘pain’ (2:35). The darker elements 
                of the verse now start to predominate: 
                anger, sin and, in particular dissonant 
                focus, ‘terror’ (4:58 to 5:34) before 
                the pure hope of ‘comforted’ is dropped 
                like the application of balm at the 
                end. Another 1997 recording by Winchester 
                Cathedral Choir/David Hill (Hyperion 
                CDA 66974) is slightly faster, 6:05 
                against Marlow’s 6:28 and thereby brighter, 
                more assertive and crisper in texture, 
                but Marlow displays awe rather than 
                declamation. 
              
 
              
Stanford’s Latin setting 
                of the Magnificat for eight-part 
                chorus makes a splendid finale. The 
                vigorous opening motif on ‘Magnificat’ 
                returns early in the piece and for the 
                Gloria. The music only calms down 1 
                minute in for ‘Quia respexit humilitatem 
                ancillae suae’ where Trinity College 
                Choir is at its finest, producing smooth 
                contoured singing of feeling followed 
                by the effortlessly soaring sequence 
                of ‘ex hoc beatam me dicent’ from tr. 
                11 1:34. Marlow gets just right the 
                contrast between the sturdy assertion 
                of ‘Quia facit mihi magna qui potens 
                est’ in the sopranos (2:36) and the 
                comely humility of ‘Et sanctum nomen 
                eius’ in the lower parts (2:42), emphasised 
                first by repetition, then return in 
                reversed scoring. ‘Dispersit superbos’ 
                (4:55) could have more venom but the 
                ethereal nature of ‘Esurientes implevit 
                bonis’ (6:41) and gauntness to ‘et divites 
                dimisit inanes’ (7:02) are well differentiated. 
                Hill (CDA 66974) gives a faster account, 
                10:09 against Marlow’s 11:34. This makes 
                for more virtuosic sinewy passages but 
                less beauteous contrast for the reflective 
                ones. 
              
 
              
The sensibility of 
                Marlow’s emotive performances catches 
                well the sensitivity of the composers’ 
                settings. The Arkiv CD under review 
                doesn’t have booklet notes but I gather 
                all future releases will and existing 
                releases are gradually being upgraded. 
              
 
              
 Michael 
                Greenhalgh