Skip to product information
1 of 1

Eloquence Australia

Kings College Choir/ David Hill / David Willcocks - Boy Was Born

Kings College Choir/ David Hill / David Willcocks - Boy Was Born

Regular price $14.99
Regular price Sale price $14.99
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Condition
Format
Release

Out of stock

SKU:ELOA8407811.2

Eighty minutes of Christmas at King's: reference Argo recordings of Britten and Vaughan Williams capturing both the magic and joy of the season as well as the resonant glory of a famous acoustic. Britten's genius as a choral composer centered around his ability to write rewarding parts for amateurs and young singers; his choice of treasurable texts, set and scored in a way which makes his music seem the only possible partner for the words; and a technical command which can achieve those perfect settings. All these attributes are evident in the trio of Christmas works on this collection: an early and virtuosic carol symphony, A Boy was Born; and a pair of small masterpieces from the 1940s, A Ceremony of Carols and Rejoice in the Lamb. Specifically designated for treble voices, the Ceremony finds a natural home in the uniquely atmospheric setting of King's College Chapel. The King's choir has made several recordings though none so consistently praised as this one, made for Decca and directed in 1990 by Stephen Cleobury, near the beginning of a tenure which only now draws to a close, having affirmed and developed the centuries-old tradition of all- male liturgical singing with many memorable recordings and broadcasts of the Nine Lessons and Carols Service on Christmas Eve. This Eloquence reissue is attractively filled out to 80 minutes with a complementary piece and recording from an earlier era of the King's tradition: the Fantasia on Christmas Carols by Vaughan Williams, directed by Sir David Willcocks and recorded in 1962 as part of the choir's collection for Argo entitled 'On Christmas Night'. While the Fantasia is often heard in full-orchestral garb, the version for strings and organ used here is arguably more effective, and certainly ideal for a chapel choir recording in the English tradition.
View full details