Please note: This concert is in the past and has already taken place.

Dartington Community Choir: Requiem

Karl Jenkins' Requiem & Maurice Durufle's Requiem

Part of the Dartington Community Choir 2018-2019 Season

Add to my Calendar 14-04-2019 19:30 14-04-2019 21:30 36 Dartington Community Choir: Requiem For its spring concert in April, Dartington Community Choir’s director of music Simon Capet brings together two very different Requiems, first performed more than half a century apart - Maurice Duruflé’s of 1947 and Karl Jenkins’ of 2005. Both are based on the traditional Latin requiem mass for the dead, but both depart in various ways from that tradition. And both are instantly appealing. Duruflé’s lyrical interpretation moves away, like Fauré’s Requiem of half a century earlier, from the traditional emphasis on tragic anguish and the dramatic horror of hell, into something more spiritually serene, blending Gregorian plainchant, which Duruflé loved deeply, with the sensuous harmonies of Faure, Debussy and Ravel, and also with Renaissance contrapuntal techniques and hints of contemporary opera.  Lyrical and gentle, this mass leaves out the terrifying Dies Irae (day of judgment) section of the traditional requiem mass, concentrating instead on a gentler impression of forgiveness, consolation and faith.  The composer dedicated his “Requiem” to the memory of his father. Karl Jenkins’ “Requiem” is like most of his work, an unashamed, multicultural melting pot of ideas and musical styles.  He interjects movements featuring five Japanese funeral poems in the form of haikus sung in Japanese, with those traditionally encountered in a requiem mass, and oriental instruments such the shakuhachi (Japanese flute) are included in the orchestration. And the ferocious Dies Irae - in the greatest possible contrast to Duruflé’s omission of this section - actually has a hip-hop beat.  Hugely popular, like Jenkins’ other works, his “Requiem” topped the classical music charts of 2005. Great Hall - Dartington Hall, Totnes DD/MM/YYYY

Details

Great Hall - Dartington Hall
Dartington
Totnes
Devon
TQ9 6EL
England


Programme

Karl JenkinsRequiem
~ Interval ~
Maurice DurufléRequiem, Op.9

Performers

Simon Capet – Conductor
Peter King – organ
Clive Bell – shakuhachi
Matt Hulbert – baritone
Charlotte Forfar – soprano

Dartington Sinfonietta
Dartington Community Choir

Other concerts in this Series (+)

Programme Note

For its spring concert in April, Dartington Community Choir’s director of music Simon Capet brings together two very different Requiems, first performed more than half a century apart - Maurice Duruflé’s of 1947 and Karl Jenkins’ of 2005. Both are based on the traditional Latin requiem mass for the dead, but both depart in various ways from that tradition. And both are instantly appealing.

Duruflé’s lyrical interpretation moves away, like Fauré’s Requiem of half a century earlier, from the traditional emphasis on tragic anguish and the dramatic horror of hell, into something more spiritually serene, blending Gregorian plainchant, which Duruflé loved deeply, with the sensuous harmonies of Faure, Debussy and Ravel, and also with Renaissance contrapuntal techniques and hints of contemporary opera.  Lyrical and gentle, this mass leaves out the terrifying Dies Irae (day of judgment) section of the traditional requiem mass, concentrating instead on a gentler impression of forgiveness, consolation and faith.  The composer dedicated his “Requiem” to the memory of his father.

Karl Jenkins’ “Requiem” is like most of his work, an unashamed, multicultural melting pot of ideas and musical styles.  He interjects movements featuring five Japanese funeral poems in the form of haikus sung in Japanese, with those traditionally encountered in a requiem mass, and oriental instruments such the shakuhachi (Japanese flute) are included in the orchestration. And the ferocious Dies Irae - in the greatest possible contrast to Duruflé’s omission of this section - actually has a hip-hop beat.  Hugely popular, like Jenkins’ other works, his “Requiem” topped the classical music charts of 2005.

Dartington Community Choir's spring concert

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