[ Hyperion / CD ]
A man of phenomenal and wide-ranging musical gifts, Leonard Bernstein is one of the great figures of twentieth-century American music. Following his time at Harvard University he entered the celebrated Curtis Institute in 1941 where a friend said, (apropos his outstanding talent), 'Lenny is doomed to success'. It was a true prophecy in that Bernstein's many-faceted career has inevitably restricted the number of works he has composed and it was, therefore, most fortunate that the Very Reverend Walter Hussey, Dean of Chichester, chose such a propitious time to approach the composer to write a work for the 1965 Chichester Festival. Bernstein had decided to take a sabbatical year, free from busy conducting schedules, to meditate on the current state of music and his own attitude towards it. This freedom also allowed him to take up whatever creative venture appealed to him.
Recorded in the Church of St. Jude-on-the-Hill, Hampstead, London on 16, 17, 20 May 1986
'An exquisite disc. Indispensable' (Acoustic Sounds Catalog, USA)
"The singing of the Corydon Singers under Matthew Best is very fine, and the vivid recording, which gives the voices a pleasant bloom while avoiding the resonance of King's College Chapel, reproduces the instrumental accompaniment, notably the percussion, with electrifying impact. Best's soloist is Dominic Martelli, and very sweetly he sings too. The disc is completed by Barber's setting of the Agnus Dei from 1967 and is an arrangement of the famous Adagio for Strings.
This imaginative and enterprising programme is extremely well sung and vividly recorded." Gramophone
Chichester Psalms
Composed By - Leonard Bernstein
Agnus Dei
Composed By - Samuel Barber
In The Beginning
Composed By - Aaron Copland
Three Motets
Composed By - Aaron Copland