A Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols

Stephen Cleobury, King's College Choir A Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols

Stephen Cleobury
King's College Choir
Label: EMI Classics
Number of Discs: 2
Format: Audio CD
Release date:2nd November 1999

Studio Audio CD $11.94Buy now at Amazon

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Track Listing

  • 1. Once In Royal David's City
  • 2. Bidding Prayer
  • 3. Up! Good Christen Folk, And Listen
  • 4. The Truth From Above
  • 5. First Lesson
  • 6. Adam Lay Yhounden
  • 7. Second Lesson
  • 8. Sussex Carol
  • 9. In The Bleak Mid-Winter
  • 10. Third Lesson
  • 11. In dulci jubilo
  • 12. God Rest You Merry Gentlemen
  • 13. Fourth Lesson
  • 14. A Tender Shoot
  • 15. The Lamb
  • 16. Fifth Lesson
  • 17. Gabriel's Message
  • 18. Joys Seven
  • 19. Sixth Lesson
  • 20. Dormi, Jesu
  • 21. Riu, riu, chiu
  • 22. Seventh Lesson
  • 23. The Fary fax Carol
  • 24. While Shepards Watched
  • 25. Eighth Lesson
  • 26. I Saw Three Ships
  • 27. Illuminare Jerusalem
  • 28. Ninth Lesson
  • 29. Adeste, fideles
  • 30. Prayer And Blessing
  • 31. Hark! The Herald Angels Sing
  • 32. In dulci Jubilo

Amazon.com

This disc could be more succinctly titled Christmas for Anglophiles. Few sounds are more British than the boy soprano-dominated Choir of King's College in Cambridge. And the group is heard--in some sections recorded live--in an actual Christmastide service amid the generous reverberation of a cathedral acoustic with little more than a tasteful though austere organ accompaniment. The repertoire isn't just conservative, traditional hymns and carols. One is harmonized by Ralph Vaughan Williams, and there are a number of contributions by contemporary composers Thomas Adès, Judith Weir, and John Tavener, all of which are probing, sincere, even personal examples of their art (and some are daringly liberated, harmonically speaking). The downside for some listeners--at least on repeated hearings--is that the entire service is heard, sermons and all. Others may take this in the spirit of a Paul McCreesh liturgical reconstruction, with congregational singing included. --David Patrick Stearns

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