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    Jonathan Harvey: The Angels, Ashes Dance Back, Marahi - Latvian Radio Choir (2011)

    Posted By: peotuvave
    Jonathan Harvey: The Angels, Ashes Dance Back, Marahi - Latvian Radio Choir (2011)

    Jonathan Harvey: The Angels, Ashes Dance Back, Marahi - Latvian Radio Choir (2011)
    EAC Rip | Flac (Image + cue + log) | 1 CD | Full Scans | 255 MB
    Genre: Classical | Label: Hyperion | Catalog Number: 67835

    Jonathan Harvey is Britain’s foremost composer of electronic music and has developed a complex and personal musical language for which he is globally recognized. His catalogue of works explores unique sound worlds and imaginative ensembles. The works on this disc, composed within seven years of each other during one of the most productive periods of Harvey’s career, demonstrate the stylistic range of his choral writing and his unique approach to the combination of live performance and electronic sound, as well as his innate sympathy for the voice.

    The Latvian Radio Choir have been labelled as the creators of a new choral paradigm: a testament to their diverse range of voices and skilful performances of challenging experimental works. The choir champions the works of many leading Latvian composers and much focus is placed on exploring the capabilities of the human voice. The singers explore their skills by turning to the mysteries of traditional singing, as well as every other vocal utterance, from speech to breath.

    They make their Hyperion debut with thrilling performances of Jonathan Harvey’s The Angels, Ashes Dances Back, Marahi and The Summer Cloud's Awakening.

    Composer: Jonathan Harvey
    Performer: Carl Faia, Jonathan Harvey, Clive Williamson, Ilona Meija, …
    Conductor: Kaspars Putnins, James Wood
    Orchestra/Ensemble: Latvian Radio Choir

    Reviews: The archetypal Jonathan Harvey piece mixes voices with electronics, and that is not surprising. He was, after all, a choirboy at the long defunct St. Michael’s Tenbury Wells. His own son was in the choir at Winchester Cathedral. It was for his son’s voice that he wrote ‘Motuos Plango’ in 1980 employing the great tolling bell of Winchester Cathedral and using computer manipulation techniques. Even, quite often performed anthems like ‘I Love the Lord’ of 1976 and ‘Come Holy Ghost’ from 1984 have such a distinctively dense sound using wave formations, constant repetition of phrases and thick tonal clusters that you feel that the a capella voices have been treated with an old fashioned ring modulator. It’s not surprising then that this new disc by the superb Latvian Radio Choir should include two works for choir and electronics. It starts more modestly with Harvey’s commission for the King’s Carol Service of 1994 The Angels also recorded back in 1995 on excellent ASV disc by The Joyful Company of Singers (CD DCA 917).

    Angels and mysticism are a sort of Harvey ‘thing’ one might say. Here with a text by his late friend Bishop John Taylor he also uses a wordless choir which provides harmonic support for a limpid melody shared between the other voices, now in unison, now in canon. A line or two of Taylor’s verse sums up the composer’s intentions “Their melody strides not from bar to bar/but like a painting, hangs there entire/one chord of limitless communication”. It’s worth following the beautiful text whilst listening, as it can sometimes get lost in the thick miasmic texture.

    Jonathan Harvey has the ability to draw pre-eminent parts from several religions or sects and channel these both musically and spiritually. We can hear this in the Anglican tradition, as in the anthems mentioned above, the Roman Catholicism of his massive ‘Madonna of Winter and Spring’ of 1986 and Buddhism, which has always fascinated him. We find quite abhorrent images on our TV screens of Buddhist monks burning themselves to death but there is an element in Buddhism, of giving ourselves back to the elements from which we emerged. These elements play a major role in the next work, Ashes Dance Back. Michael Downes’ excellent enclosed notes tell us that the work “realizes the idea of the ‘self’ - represented metaphorically by the choir - to the elements of wind, fire and water”. He goes on later: “Harvey processed sounds of wind, fire and water through a computer analysis of choral sounds producing a recording that blends almost seamlessly with the sound and creates the illusion that the elements themselves are singing.” From time to time the ‘elemental’ sound is clearly audible and at the others just fragments of the text. The Indian poet Rumi is used in a beautiful translation by poet Andrew Harvey. I quote “ I burn away: laugh; my ashes are alive!/I die a thousand times/my ashes dance back/A thousand new faces”. It is an emotional and spiritual exercise listening to this work as it often is with Harvey but the journey is certainly worthwhile.

    We are also told that Ashes Dance Back, although continuous, can be heard to be in three movements. For this forlorn listener Hyperion might have been more helpful and tracked the work accordingly. Had the done so the structure, which is difficult to grasp if it exists at all, might then have been more clearly elucidated.

    Although Marahi is only ten minutes in duration, it has the longest text (all texts are given clearly and translated). It is in Latin, Sanskrit with spoken sections in English. Texts in honour of the Virgin and of the Buddha are inter-mixed very directly. These encapsulate Harvey’s beliefs and background. At one point the composer asks the voices to make animal noises. These are performed here most successfully and believably. These are included because Harvey’s wants to “suggest the interdependency of different acts of creation”. The whole work attempts to demonstrate “the continuity between Christian and Buddhist beliefs”. The performance is striking although the spoke English is not always clear.

    The last work The Summer Cloud’s Awakening is also the longest. To the choir and the electronics Harvey adds a flute and a cello. This work has a very short text: two in fact by Buddha Shakyamuni. It is one of his most extraordinary scores and reveals a world of stasis and spiritual depth almost beyond the experience of western religious comprehension. It was composed for James Wood. In addition to the Buddhist text sung in the English - given in translation in the booklet - there are also musical quotes from Wagner’s ‘Tristan und Isolde’. The famous chord drifts periodically across the texture as well as other motifs. The music is not all mystery: there are some faster and more ‘focused’ passages. These ideas were to build into his 2006 opera ‘Wagner Dream’. In these works there is a fascination with human suffering brought about by human desire. To explain the music would be ridiculous. You simple must buy the disc to draw your own conclusions. You will either consider it a masterwork or crass and pretentious.

    I’m not sure why Hyperion has taken three years to get this disc onto the market but it has been worth it. There are some significant and fascinating pieces here. The recording is ideal with balance and engineering of demonstration class. The performances committed, stunning and seemingly flawless. Well worth investing in.

    Tracklisting:

    1. The Angels by Jonathan Harvey
    Conductor: Kaspars Putnins
    Orchestra/Ensemble: Latvian Radio Choir
    Period: 20th Century
    Written: 1994; England

    2. Ashes Dance Back by Jonathan Harvey
    Performer: Carl Faia (Electronics), Jonathan Harvey (Electronics), Clive Williamson (Piano)
    Conductor: James Wood
    Orchestra/Ensemble: Latvian Radio Choir
    Period: 20th Century
    Written: 1997

    3. The Summer Cloud's Awakening by Jonathan Harvey
    Performer: Ilona Meija (Flute), Clive Williamson (Piano), Carl Faia (Electronics),
    Jonathan Harvey (Electronics), Arne Deforce (Cello)
    Conductor: James Wood
    Orchestra/Ensemble: Latvian Radio Choir
    Written: 2001

    4. Mahari by Jonathan Harvey
    Conductor: James Wood
    Orchestra/Ensemble: Latvian Radio Choir
    Period: 20th Century
    Written: 1999

    Exact Audio Copy V1.0 beta 3 from 29. August 2011

    EAC extraction logfile from 24. January 2012, 13:15

    Latvian Radio Choir - James Wood, Kaspars Putnins / Harvey - The Angels; Ashes Dance Back; Marahi & The Summer Cloud's Awakening

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    Read offset correction : 48
    Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
    Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
    Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
    Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
    Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000

    Used output format : User Defined Encoder
    Selected bitrate : 896 kBit/s
    Quality : High
    Add ID3 tag : Yes
    Command line compressor : C:\Program Files\Exact Audio Copy\Flac\flac.exe
    Additional command line options : -V -8 %source%


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    3 | 22:28.29 | 10:20.28 | 101129 | 147656
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    Range status and errors

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    Copy OK

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    Thanks to the original releaser

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