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Remoter Worlds - Choral Music by Judith Bingham

 
Remoter Worlds - Choral Music by Judith Bingham -Choir-Choral Collection
ID: SIGCD144 (EAN: 635212014424)  | 1 CD | DDD
Publi: 2008
LABEL:
Signum Records
Collection:
Choral Collection
Subcollection:
Choir
Compositeurs:
BINGHAM, Judith
Interprètes:
ADAMS-BARBARO, Jennifer | BENJAFIELD, Richard (percussion) | BOWEN, Christopher (tenor) | BRANNICK, Chris (percussion) | CHARLESWORTH, Stephen (baritone) | FARRINGTON, Iain (organ / ) | FEAVIOUR, Margaret (soprano) | GOATER, Edward (tenor) | JEFFES, Stephen (tenor) | JOHNSTON, Robert (tenor) | MILES-JOHNSON, Deborah (mezzo-soprano) | MURGATROYD, Andrew | OSOSTOWICZ, Krysia (violin) | PRICE, Edward (bass) | ROBINSON, Olivia (soprano) | SMART, Alison (soprano)
Orchestre
BBC Singers Choir
Chef d'orchestre:
HILL, David
Pour plus amples dtails:

The BBC Singers, led by David Hill, are the UK's only full-time professional chamber choir, and their repertoire and virtuosic versatility are almost boundless. The BBC Singers regularly work with the BBC's own orchestras as well as a number of period instrument and contemporary ensembles both in concert and in the recording studio.

This disc features the compositional talent of one of the BBC Singer's former members, Judith Bingham. Bingham is considered a talented all-round composer, having written for a variety of different ensembles including symphonic wind ensembles, brass bands and solo instrumentalists, Despite this she is best known for her choral work, in which she has been commissioned by such ensembles as The King's Singers, the BBC Symphony Chorus and King's College Choir, Cambridge, She has won numerous awards including the Barlow Prize for a cappela music and three British Composer awards.

Remoter Worlds
Judith Bingham
Tracklist
 
BINGHAM, Judith (b.1952) 
1. Gleams of a Remoter World6:49
 play
The Shepheardes Calender 
2. Winter3:57
 play
3. Spring4:18
 play
4. Autumn2:44
 play
5. Water Lilies7:03
 play
Irish Tenebrae 
6. My Lagan Love4:15
 play
7. The Road to Sligo3:34
 play
Edward Goater, tenor 
8. The Crying of the Women at the Slaughter5:15
 play
9. The Wake: Round the House and Mind the Dresser2:01
 play
Stephen Charlesworth, baritone / Edward Price, bass /  
10. I Have a Secret to Tell4:28
 play
Stephen Jeffes, tenor / Andrew Murgatroyd, whistler 
11. I Know My Love2:24
 play
12. The Sailor Boy6:00
 play
Olivia Robinson, soprano / Krysia Osostowicz, violin / Iain Farrington, chamber organ / Richard Benjafield, percussion / Chris Brannick, percussion 
13. Unpredictable but Providential3:35
 play
Christopher Bowen, tenor  
14. Beneath these Alien Stars3:45
 play
Alison Smart soprano / Iain Farrington, organ 
Ghost Towns of the American West 
15. I Speak Out of the Desert3:33
 play
16. The Gray Mask High in the Mountains4:20
 play
Margaret Feaviour, soprano / Deborah Miles-Johnson, mezzo-soprano / Robert Johnston, tenor / Jennifer Adams-Barbaro, whistler 
17. The Voices of the Multitude3:31
 play
Margaret Feaviour, soprano /Christopher Bowen, tenor 

Analyse:
 

MusicWeb.co.uk, December 2008
Powerplant are described as ‘percussion-led’ on the back of this CD, but on the evidence of this disc the impression given seems more synth-led with a bit on string quartet on the side. Previous to receiving this release for review, I’d taken a look at a few Powerplant videos online, and their stage presence is enhanced with video backdrops and other effects, some of the atmosphere of which can be seen on an MP4 video file on this CD which visually enhances the piece Temazcal. The imagery on the video is quite an effective representation of the music, with the injection of ink clouds underlining certain percussion effects, flowing, bubbling water and light adding extra dynamism to a piece which is already filled with fascinating nuances of sound.
Steve Reich’s Electric Counterpoint was written for the bouncy guitar sound of Pat Metheny, and while I have come across the piece in a number of other guises, it is his 1987 Nonesuch recording which is pretty much the definitive thing. I have nothing against re-arrangements of this kind of piece and I’m sure it goes down a storm at live gigs, but to my ears the electronics used by Powerplant lose too much of the life and colour of real guitar strings. I’m actually quite glad the lads don’t try and make the electronics sound like anything other than what they are, and there are some moments where the music could be straight from a Kraftwerk track, which I suppose shines something of a new light on Reich’s minimalism of that period. 3 minutes into the first movement, and you only need a chuffing train effect or similar industrial emphasis to parody the band whose music is treated in the following three numbers. The mellifluous central movement becomes rather headache-inducing and treble-heavy in this version,
Kraftwerk has been around since the 1970s, and no doubt most readers of these pages have a secret stash of their albums tucked away somewhere. No? Well, their kind of electronic, minimalist pop suits Powerplant’s approach very well indeed, and the arrangements of the three numbers here work decently enough, even if you know the originals. I was never that enamoured of the Tour de France title track, preferring the more gritty, ‘beats per minute’ physicality of some of the other numbers on the album, but Powerplant have a decent run at it, making it even more of a frothy pop number than you would expect. There are a few aspects of these settings which sit less easily to my mind however, and it mostly boils down to the placement of live instruments against drum computers and heavy electronics. Since the Kronos and Balanescu quartets this medium has taken on a life of its own and good luck to them, but any string quartet almost invariably sounds horribly twee and ineffectual in this kind of context: a bit like a
Carbon Copy is an intriguing track which uses an African berimbau, one of those bent sticks with one metal string and a resonating globe at the base. This adds interesting resonance to quite a funky track, but again, the subtlety of an authentic instrument is lost somewhat. It comes into its own through sampling and processing of the sound, which adds depth to the whole thing, but ultimately I felt this didn’t go far enough - you can be truly groovy with a good deal less drum-kit, and in the end the whole thing turns out more like a demo sketch than a completed piece.
Javier Alvarez is a respected Mexican composer and percussionist, and his Temazcal introduces a different sound world. Fizzing maracas create a field of noise, over which electronic noises create their own layers of ostinato and interruption. The title means ‘burning water’, which I’m told can be interpreted as its purifying effect - as in a sauna. The creative synergy between the excellent percussionists which make up Powerplant and the serious input of a decent composer shows more of the direction in which Powerplant are at their best. No doubt Kraftwerk sells more tickets than Alvarez, but for me this is the best track on the album.
The final audio number is Audiotectonics III by the sound design half of this group, Matthew Fairclough. Written for an instrument called the xylosynth, a cross between a xylophone and a synthesizer, the samples include a wide variety of African, European and South American instruments. It’s hard to escape the feeling of someone playing with a new high-tech toy and the piece doesn’t really ‘do’ very much other than demonstrate the instrument, but it is interesting to hear and spectacular in its own way - certainly enough to shake the dust from your woofers.
If the Steve Reich piece is your prime motivation for seeking out this disc then I wouldn’t recommend it above, or even as a supplement to the Pat Metheny original, though I admit there are few if any alternatives available at the moment. Since Bill Bailey’s ‘Kraftwerk Tribute’ I have unfortunately found it quite hard to take Kraftwerk arrangements too seriously, but the tracks on this CD are good fun and quite effectively Krafted. The fairly short playing time and rather mixed programming of this disc make it somewhat hard to recommend, either to classical or pop fans - it falls somewhere in between, and I can see it being neither fish nor flesh to both. If you want to know where contemporary percussion is currently at however, with all its stylistic fusions and multi-media effects, then this is as good a place to start as any.
Dominy Clements


The Guardian, 7th November 2008
***

Powerplant is a collective brougth together by percussionist Joby Burgess, combining Burgesss oplaying with electonics and soundscapes devised by Matthew Fairclough and visuals by Kathy Hinde. This disc provides an intriguing sample of their rogramming - a mix of original works created by Burgess and Fairclough, and a particularly striking piece, Temazcal, by the electro-acoustic composer Javier Alvarez, alongside arrangements of Steve Reich and three numbers by Kraftwerk. Electric Counterpoint, originally composed in 1987 for the guitarist Pat Metheny, is part of a series in which Reich combined a solo instrument with prerecorded tapes of itself. Burgess transfers it to xylosynth, a hybrid instrument somewhere between a xylophone and a synthesiser, to create a glinting, chiming soundworld that seems perfectly judge for Reich’s-intricate canonical writing. The Kraftwerk arrangements - including one of tour de france, which itself uses a theme by Hindemith as its main rith - range much more widely, with the El
Andrew Clements


 

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