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Benjamin Britten Christs Nativity
A Shepherds carol, Hymn to the virgin, A boy was born
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Holst Singers
Susan Gritton
Catherine Wyn-Rogers
Stephen Layton

CD Compact, Spain
Interpretaciones tan refrescantes como escrupulosas

Diapason, France
Remarquable! Les Holst Singers se révèlent être de
remarquables interprètes de leur cher répertoire national.
Cette anthologie atteste du niveau vocal et musical de ce choeur (et donc
de leur chef Stephen Layton)

Organists Review
Their commitment to what they are singing rings out with every note. A
Boy was Born is imbued with more ravishing feeling than I would have thought
possible

Gramophone
Christ's Nativity, earlier known as The King's Birthday, a Christmas suite
in five movements, receives here its first performance on record. Two
numbers (ìNew Prince, new pompî and ìSweet was the song the Virgin sangî)
were revised by the composer and included, respectively, in the Aldeburgh
Festivals of 1955 and 1966, but the complete work, which dates from 1931,
remained unheard for 60 years. One of the minor marvels about the young
Britten was his ability to lay his hands on texts that were both fresh
in their antiquity and apt for his purposes. ìPreparationsî, from a Christ
Church manuscript, is a splendid example. In colourful language, it reproaches
Christendom, along the lines of how everybody would jump to it and dash
about if the King were suddenly to announce his arrival as a dinner guest,
and yet how off-hand and niggardly we are (ìall's set at six and sevenî)
ìat the coming of the King of Heavenî. All are fine settings, probably
the best being ìNew Prince, new pompî. This adapts a simple poem by the
martyr Robert Southwell, now readily available in the Oxford Book of Sixteenth-Century
Verse ‚ but that was first published in 1932, so Britten would have had
to look elsewhere. Where too, one wonders, would he have found the Carol
of King Cnut, a curious poem by C. W. Stubbs and perfectly suited to its
place as a joyful finale.

This must constitute the prime interest of the present disc; but the entire
programme is welcome, assembling, as it does, a collection of choral works
either for Christmas in particular or for thanks-giving in general. In
as far as the performances and recorded sound call for adverse comment,
it is in respects similar to those which made it needful in the choir's
recent Vaughan Williams disc, ìOver hill, over daleî (Hyperion, 2/96).
Stephen Layton, the conductor, must have a liking for slow speeds; either
that or the resonant acoustics may have urged their advisability in the
interests of clarity. Comparing A Boy is Born as performed here with the
version by The Sixteen and the premiere recording under Britten himself,
one finds that this (with the exception of a single movement) is the slowest,
Britten the fastest. Moreover, the comparison arises only out of an immediate
feeling, in the opening movement, that the thing is dragging and that
the sound wants more immediacy and sharpness of definition. The exception
is the ìThree Kingsî variation, where Britten takes the longest and Layton
the shortest time, gaining from the extra impetus as from the deeper perspectives
of sound. The good work of the Holst Singers themselves is enriched by
the strong, pure tone of the St Paul's trebles, and, in the Canticles,
by David Goode's excellent accompaniments.

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