Well, Draco, we agree about the acoustic - dead in my speakers as well - and several other things too. Granted that the choir was doing a pretty good job, what struck me most was that it was curiously constructed as a service. Why no responses? Why an opening congregational hymn, followed almost at once by an Office hymn? Why was the first anthem changed to provide another airing for the KJB prize-winning anthem when the chanted psalms did not use the KJB translation? And why two anthems separated by a few prayers? I can't deny that I quite enjoyed the service musically, but it did keep interrupting itself with conundrums.
I too found myself looking for Jewish connections in the viola addition to the Canticles - "Schindler's List" crossed my mind several times. I rather liked the Whitbourn settings - vivid contrasts in tempi and mood, the angular and fluent juxtaposed - but did wonder how essential the viola was. The first anthem teased again with its presumably deliberate Britten reference ("...malignity ceases, and the devils themselves are at peace") bracketing music designed for the Parish Easy Anthem Book: am I missing a subtlety? MacDowall also teased with contrasting sections (include some momentary barber-shopping) that ended up as somehow less than the sum of their parts (on one hearing, anyway!).
All in all, something of a curate's egg - which I'm afraid to say I found liturgically unsettling despite its musical interest. And yes, the closing voluntary came as joyous relief!
I too found myself looking for Jewish connections in the viola addition to the Canticles - "Schindler's List" crossed my mind several times. I rather liked the Whitbourn settings - vivid contrasts in tempi and mood, the angular and fluent juxtaposed - but did wonder how essential the viola was. The first anthem teased again with its presumably deliberate Britten reference ("...malignity ceases, and the devils themselves are at peace") bracketing music designed for the Parish Easy Anthem Book: am I missing a subtlety? MacDowall also teased with contrasting sections (include some momentary barber-shopping) that ended up as somehow less than the sum of their parts (on one hearing, anyway!).
All in all, something of a curate's egg - which I'm afraid to say I found liturgically unsettling despite its musical interest. And yes, the closing voluntary came as joyous relief!
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