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Tuesday
10th May| New Zealand Herald | William Dart |
TOWER Voices New Zealand at
St Michael's Church
The 27 singers enter, followed by
conductor Karen Grylls and,
without
a word
of introduction,
they carry us
away to heaven
itself with Corona aurea, a motet by the Renaissance
composer Peter Phillips. Tower Voices New Zealand are on the
eve of a European Tour that will see them taking part in
the highly regarded
Marktoberdorf Chamber Choir Competition, and this is a taste
of some of the music that they will be taking with them.
Apart
from some limp Shakespeare settings by William Mathias,
with rattling piano accompaniment, the choices show class.
Gesualdo's
Dolcissima mia vita has its ear-teasing harmonies pinned
to perfection, and the singers account for all the
considerable detail in Brahms'
Wenn wir in hochsten noten sein.
As the final chord of
the Brahms dies away, Grylls' arms linger momentarily
in the air as if trying
to contain the many wonderful notes that she has drawn
from the choir.
Poulenc's Un soir de neige reveals
the singers' vocalism
at its most lustrous. These four snowscapes were
written during
a bleak 1944 Christmas in occupied France and show
the French composer's ability to merge the chaste and
the passionate with a dash of irony - a timely piece when
too
many forget
or are
unaware of man's inhumanities to his fellow man.
Tower
Voices
also remind us that they will be promoting our
own composers on their tour.
David Hamilton's Veni, Sancte
Spiritus
spins complex textures around St Michael's ample
acoustics,
showcases a sturdy
tenor section and takes its leave with resounding
alleluias.
New to me are Anthony Ritchie's Widows
Songs, settings
of three Cilla McQueen poems on grief. The
composer finds just the right
tone for these exquisitely observed minutiae
of life, with
tenors and basses evoking the chill
of winter winds
on either side of
the cycle.
David Griffiths' three James K.
Baxter settings of Lie, deep my love show once again
that Griffiths is without peer
in this field. Sumptuously voiced by composer
and singers alike, laid out over eight parts, this
is music
to
lose yourself in
as you contemplate the poet's singular visions of the ever-changing
and ever-challenging cycle of life.
*Who: Tower Voices
New Zealand
*Where: St Michael's Church
|