Christmas at St John's

Christmas at St John's

Christmas at St John's
Director of Music: 
David Hill
Organ Scholar: 
Paul Provost
Release date: 
January 2006
Record label: 
Hyperion
Catalogue number: 
CDA67576

Taking as its starting point their world-famous Advent Carol Service, The Choir of St John’s College, Cambridge, is here on dazzling form in an imaginative and varied programme devised by David Hill. Alongside Christmas classics by Rutter, Warlock, Howells and Holst, we have new works by Judith Bingham and Francis Pott, and Naylor’s epic Vox dicentis. Many of these works have specific connections to David Hill and his choir, and the resulting conviction of performance is a testimony to their stature. A narrative thread is provided throughout the disc by the seven Great ‘O’ Antiphons (‘O Wisdom’, ‘O Key of David’, etc) which fall on 17 to 23 December in the liturgy. At the close David Hill’s imaginative arrangement of Bethlehem Down (combining the popular choral version with Warlock’s own accompaniment for a solo song version) leads into Morten Lauridsen’s phenomenally successful O magnum mysterium and a blaze of glory in the Christmas Day hymn O come, all ye faithful. ‘Hodie Christ natus est’ indeed.

Produced by Mark Brown
Engineered by Julian Millard

Total duration: 73 minutes 49 seconds

Track list

  1. Chapel Bell
  2. Rorate Caeli, Plainsong
  3. Hymn: O come, O come, Emmanuel
  4. The O Antiphons
  5. A tender shoot, Goldschmidt
  6. A Spotless Rose, Howells
  7. Hymn: Lo! He comes with clouds descending
  8. Vox dicentis: Clama, Naylor
  9. The clouded Heaven, Bingham
  10. There is a flower, Rutter
  11. This have I done for my true love, Holst
  12. Lullay my liking, Pott
  13. Bethlehem Down, Warlock
  14. O magnum mysterium, Lauridsen
  15. Hymn: O come, all ye fauthful
  16. Antiphon: Hodie Christus natus est

More about this release

David Hill's Advent programme imaginatively mingles antiphons, carols, hymns and motets. Favourites alternate with relative rarities such as Edward Naylor's Vox Dicentis: Clama, whose sumptuous sonorities unfold gloriously in the chapel's acoustic...The John's choir, fielding what sounds like a vintage crop of trebles, sings throughout with its trademark mixture of refinement and gutsy energy.

Daily Telegraph
 

Blend, balance, intonation and diction are all unfailingly top-drawer, and the choir's unanimity of phrasing and dynamic shading come across as something quite special…Both engineering and annotation are well up to the same standard.

Fanfare (USA)

This is a very fine disc indeed...The overall impression with which I’m left is one of great satisfaction and pleasure. The programme has been assembled with great imagination and the execution is well nigh flawless. When one adds in excellent and very atmospheric sound, first rate notes and texts and translations, it all adds up to a very distinguished package indeed. I shall be surprised if I encounter a finer CD of Christmas music this year.

MusicWeb International

This recording holds some of the most exquisite choral singing I have ever heard. They must be one of the finest choirs in England. Not only is the technical standard dazzlingly high, but the readings are engaging, animated and sensitively shaped.

American Record Guide

Share this

Latest webcast

Recorded on
9 March 2024

 

A Meditation on the Passion of Christ is a service of music and readings reflecting on the Passion of Christ. This year the service features music by Byrd, Purcell, Weelkes and MacMillan, as well as the final piece of a triptych of works written for the choir by Joanna Marsh.

Latest news

Friday, July 12, marks the release of Magnificat 4, the final installment in Andrew Nethsingha's extraordinary legacy of recordings with The Choir of St John's College, Cambridge. This release not only includes new commissions and pieces written for the Choir of St John's College, but also signifies the end of a monumental chapter in its history.

The commitment, projection and natural energy of this choir have never failed to inspire me

Organists’ Review