Showing posts with label Cecilia McDowall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cecilia McDowall. Show all posts

Thursday, November 28, 2024

UCI Chamber Singers Tackle Rutter, Gjeilo, McDowall and More on "Winter Night" off of Signum

 

UCI Chamber Singers Tackle Rutter, Gjeilo, and More on "Winter Night" off of Signum

Editor's Note: The description below is that of the label.

The UCI Chamber Singers, under the direction of Irene Messoloras, proudly present Winter Night, a heartwarming holiday compilation that beautifully weaves together timeless seasonal favourites and innovative new arrangements. Featuring composers such as Sir John Rutter (Wexford Carol), Cecilia McDowall (Now May We Singen), and Ola Gjeilo (The First Nowell), Winter Night Winter offers radiant and reflective holiday music that captures the spirit of the season.

1 Gabriel’s Message (arr. Jim Clements)
2 Wexford Carol (arr. John Rutter)
3 Now May We Singen (C. McDowall)
4 The First Nowell (arr. Ola Gjeilo)
5 We Toast the Days

Release date: November 29, 2024

Winter Night [Digital Only] - Signum Records


Disclaimer: Regarding the photos and descriptions used above: We do not know whom the owners of these are and infringement is not intended. Photos and descriptions are used for educational purposes only. We will gladly oblige any take down under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Photos and descriptions are used under the allowance made for "fair use" under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976 for the purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. We will oblige any takedown request of any photo on this blog in compliance with the DMCA.

Monday, October 30, 2023

In A Winter Breviary, St. Martin's Voices gives premiere recordings of big-name contemporary composers

 


In A Winter Breviary, St. Martin's Voices gives premiere recordings of big-name contemporary composers

A Winter Breviary, St. Martins's Voices, Andrew Earis

In this, their debut recording with Resonus Classics, St Martin's Voices presents a selection of contemporary choral works for the Christmas season. With settings of poetry from the fifteenth century to the present day, these new carols explore themes of winter snowscapes, the anticipation and contemplation of Advent, the Christmas story as seen by the women at its heart, and the joy of coming in from the cold to celebrate together.

In a programme made entirely of premiere recordings, this album features works by Cecilia McDowall, Roderick Williams and Lucy Walker, among others. The album also boasts a major new carol suite by Bob Chilcott, with libretto by Georgia Way entitled Mary, Mother, which was premiered by the ensemble in 2022.

Olivia Sparkhall (b.1976)
1. All and some

Cecilia McDowall (b.1951)
2. There is no rose

Reena Esmail (b.1983)
A Winter Breviary
3. We Look For You
(Evensong – Raag Hamsadhwani)
4. The Year’s Midnight
(Matins – Raag Malkauns)
5. The Unexpected Early Hour
(Lauds – Raag Ahir Bhairav)

Sarah MacDonald (b.1968)
The Manger is Empty
6. Like the snow in winter
7. As among broken glass
8. The manger is empty

Nils Greenhow (b.1989)
9. Advent Calendar

Thomas Hewitt Jones (b.1984)
10. Love is the Answer

Lucy Walker (b.1998)
The Christmas Life
11. The Christmas Life
12. We shall walk
13. The Angels’ Song

Yshani Perinpanayagam (b.1983)
14. When God made Eve

Roderick Williams (b.1965)
15. Queen Elizabeth’s Winchester
Carol (The Royal Carol)

Bob Chilcott (b.1955)
Mary, Mother
16. A child in Galilee
17. Carpentry Carol
18. After the angel
19. Walking Carol
20. Dear heart
21. Hymn

https://www.resonusclassics.com/products/a-winter-breviary-music-for-christmas


Disclaimer: Regarding the photos and descriptions used above, we do not know whom the owners of these are, and infringement is not intended. Photos and descriptions are used for educational purposes only. We will gladly oblige any take down under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Photos and descriptions are used under the allowance made for "fair use" under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976 for the purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. We will oblige any takedown request of any photo on this blog in compliance with the DMCA.

Friday, October 20, 2023

Signum Classics Releases "The Christmas Album" by the Phoenix Chorale

 


Label's Description:

This is a Christmas album that has a sense of place, clearly identifying the Chorale as both American and from a border state with Mexico, and something for everyone whether they prefer serious or light festive fare. There is Hispanic influence in the repertoire choices, which include Catalan folksongs as well as Hispanic Renaissance music. It includes a commission by Cecilia McDowall, written for Christmas 2021, new arrangements of all tracks and also some contemporary Christmas favourites such as Sleigh Ride and Jingle Bells. This marks the Chorale’s return to recording following an 8-year hiatus, and their first album with Signum Records.


1. Veni, veni – Emmanuel Trad. arr Philip Lawson
Trad. Catalan arr. Goff Richards / Chris Gabbitas
2. El niño querido
3. Claro Abril resplandeçio
4. Nit de vetlla
5. Resonet in Laudibus – Orlando di Lasso
6. O Magnum Mysterium – Cecilia McDowall
7. O Nata Lux – Cecilia McDowall
8. O Virgo Virginum – Cecilia McDowall
9. Beata Dei genitrix Maria (Part I only) – Francisco Guerrero
10. Gaudete – Trad. arr Brian Kay / Chris Gabbitas
11. A Quiet Chamber – Tom Peterson

12. The Wexford Carol – Trad. Irish arr. Kira Zeeman Rugen
13. In the bleak midwinter – Trad. English arr. Alexander L’Estrange
14. Christ the Apple Tree – Stanford Scriven
15. La peregrinacion -Trad. Catalan arr. Goff Richards / Chris Gabbitas
16. Winter Wonderland (shortened version) – Smith/Bernard arr. Alexander L’Estrange
17. Sleigh Ride – Leroy Anderson arr. Alexander L’Estrange
18. The Christmas Song – Wells/Tormé arr. Peter Knight / Chris Gabbitas
19. Jingle Bells – Pierpont arr. Ben Parry
20. Noche de Paz – Franz Gruber arr. James Burton

https://signumrecords.com/product/the-christmas-album/SIGCD762/



The Christmas Album: Chris Chats with Blanton Alspaugh, Producer


'The Christmas Album': Chat with Kira Zeeman Rugen, composer


'The Christmas Album: Chat with Tom Peterson, composer


'The Christmas Album': Chris chats with Cecilia McDowall, composer



Facebook: @phoenixchorale


Disclaimer: Regarding the photos and descriptions used above, we do not know whom the owners of these are, and infringement is not intended. Photos and descriptions are used for educational purposes only. We will gladly oblige any take down under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Photos and descriptions are used under the allowance made for "fair use" under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976 for the purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. We will oblige any takedown request of any photo on this blog in compliance with the DMCA.

Sunday, November 14, 2021

Cecilia McDowall: Commissioned for Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols

Cecilia McDowall: Commissioned for Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols

King's College, Cambridge announces McDowall was commissioned for a new carol for the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols


On November 12, 2021, the Choir of King's College, Cambridge announced on their Facebook Page that composer Cecilia McDowall had been commissioned to write the annual new carol for the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carol. A press release was also released.


Photo attribution: Karina Lyburn 
Accessed November 14, 2021.*

Since 1983, the Choir of King's College, Cambridge has  commissioned a prominent composer to write a new carol to be performed at the annual Festival of Nine Lessons in Carol on Christmas Eve. 

The tradition was started by the late Stephen Cleobury to continue the tradition of carol composition. The first composer commission was Lennox Berkley and the last was Phillip Moore. No composer was commission in 2020, most likely due to the world-wide pandemic.

The announcement of the new carol is often the most anticipated new carol in the choral world and we think the carol-loving world was sad that no carol was premiered last year. See "The State of the Christmas Carol: 2020." 

The Christmas Carols Blog has been using King's list of past commissioned composers to explore the modern carol repertory. So far we have focused on:

Peter Maxell Davies

Judith Weir

Lennox Berkeley

Diana Burrell

Richard Rodney Bennett

Also of interest to readers is our post Working List of Choral Recording Focusing on Modern Composers Christmas Works on albums dedicated to the Christmas repertory of select composers. They include Peter Warlock, Stephen Paulus, Ola Gielo, Bob Chilcott, Ralph Vaught Williams, Michael John Trotta, Leo Sowerby, William Ferris, Paul Edwards, Leroy Anderson, Witold Lutoslawski, Alfred Burt, Gustav Holst, William Walton, John Rutter, Jacques Cohen, John Tavaner, Daniel Pickham, Samuel Pegg, and Ben Perry.

Of course the Festival of Nine Lesson and Carols is not the only place to hear new carols. Last year our blog posted an extensive lists of New Carols, Premiered Carols, and Premiered Christmas Music 2020.

King's announced McDowell's carol would be a setting of "There is no rose."

"There is no rose," of course, is a text very famous in the carol world. According to the editors of the New Oxford Book of Carols, it is found in the "early fifteenth-century manuscript roll in the library of Trinity College, Cambridge." 

Is is the last item listed in the manuscript and had original music but the original music is difficult to decipher due to manuscript decay. 

The editors state, "The identification of Mary with the rose was a common medieval conceit which forms the bases of several surviving English carols and a multitude of Latin hymns." The editors state the Latin in the first three verses may be derived from the "Chirstmastide office (Introit) antiphone "Gaudeamus, omnes fedeles: Alvator noster natus est in mundum..." ("Rejoice, all we faithful, our Saviour is born into the world..."). 

There are also modern settings by John Joubert and Benjamin Britten among other composers.

For more information and a bio on Cecilia McDowell, see her website: Cecilia McDowall | British contemporary composer - Cecilia McDowall. If Cecilia McDowall is reading this, congratulations and we love the scarf.

Sources: Keyte, Hugh and Parrott, Andrew. The New Oxford Book of Carols," Oxford University Press, 1992: 28. 

Disclaimer: The heading photo used above is from McDowell's website. We do not know who is the owner of this photo, and infringement is not intended. We will gladly oblige any take down under the Digital Millennium Copyright  Act (DMCA). We will also obliged to add an photographer credit. The second photo is by Karina Lyburn and is a post on the Choir of King's College, Cambridge's Facebook page and also appears to be a photo on McDowell's website also. Photos are used under the allowance made for "fair use" under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976 for the purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. We will obliged any takedown request of the Lyburn photo under the DMCA.

Saturday, December 19, 2020

Clara Leonardi article focuses on Woman Composers and Christmas Music



Clara Leonardi article focuses on Woman Composers and Christmas Music

Check out the article by Clara Leonardi, "Christmas with the Ladies," which focuses on woman composers contributions to Christmas music:

The Clara Variations: Christmas with the ladies

 

DISCLAIMER: Owner of photo or photos above is unknown. Infringement is not intentional and photo is used for educational purposes only with in the Fair Use clause of Section 107 of the Copyright Act. We will will be obliged any take down request under the DMCA .