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

'Wondrous Machine" with the Elgar Chorale of Worcester

A choral celebration in praise of the installation of the new Ruffatti organ at Pershore Abbey

Add to my Calendar 23-03-2024 19:30 23-03-2024 21:30 36 'Wondrous Machine" with the Elgar Chorale of Worcester Worcester’s well-known chamber choir, The Elgar Chorale directed by Piers Maxim returns to Pershore Abbey in March and is joined by Paul Trepte, recently retired former Director of Music and Organist at Ely Cathedral in an exciting programme of music from Eastern Europe showcasing the recently installed Ruffatti pipe organ at the Abbey. Featuring composers Zoltán Kodály, Leoš Janáček, Antonín Dvořák, Sergei Rachmaninoff and Henryk Górecki, the Chorale is also joined by John Upperton (tenor), Shulah Oliver (violin) and Natasha Gale (harp) bringing a wonderful variety of musical pieces to the audience. Two substantial works in the programme are Kodály’s Missa Brevis and Janáček’s Otče náš (Our Father). The Missa Brevis, first performed during the siege of Budapest towards the end of the second world war, was written at a time of great uncertainty, danger and personal hardship. It is a tour-de-force — colourful, expressive, exuberant, and energetic, a choral masterpiece with a very identifiable voice. The version here is scored for organ, chorus and soloists and in fact the work received its British premiere, in an orchestrated version at the Three Choirs Festival in Worcester Cathedral in 1948.  Janáček was a fiercely spiritual agnostic when he wrote his Otče náš and it represents his faith in the community as a product of a shared Slavic heritage and spirit. Here it is scored for solo tenor, mixed chorus, organ and harp. There are wonderful moments in it as with the solo tenor’s heroic entries Thy Kingdom Come and Thy Will Be Done and the chorus’s stirring responses.  Other pieces in the concert include Kodály’s Laudes Organi (In Praise of Organs) his last completed work with its particularly triumphant conclusion, marking a fitting end to the career of the composer whose contribution to the Hungarian choral tradition remains unrivalled; also Janáček’s Zdravas (Hail Mary), Rachmaninoff’s Bogoroditse Devo, Górecki’s Totus Tuus and Dvořák’s Goin’ Home (theme from the New World Symphony). Do join us for a wonderful evening of music making in a glorious setting. Pershore Abbey, Pershore DD/MM/YYYY

Details

Pershore Abbey
Church Walk
Pershore
Worcestershire
WR10 1BB
England

Programme

Zoltán Kodály – Missa Brevis
Antonin Dvorak – Going Home
Henryk Gorecki – Totus Tuus, Op.60
Sergei Rachmaninov – All-night Vigil (Vespers): Bogoroditse Devo
Leoš Janáček – Zdravas Maria
Leoš Janáček – Otce nas
Zoltán Kodály – Jesus and the Traders
Zoltán Kodály – Laudes Organi

Performers

Piers Maxim – choral director
Paul Trepte – organ
John Upperton – tenor
Shulah Oliver – violin
natasha gale – Harp

Elgar Chorale

Programme Note

Worcester’s well-known chamber choir, The Elgar Chorale directed by Piers Maxim returns to Pershore Abbey in March and is joined by Paul Trepte, recently retired former Director of Music and Organist at Ely Cathedral in an exciting programme of music from Eastern Europe showcasing the recently installed Ruffatti pipe organ at the Abbey.

Featuring composers Zoltán Kodály, Leoš Janáček, Antonín Dvořák, Sergei Rachmaninoff and Henryk Górecki, the Chorale is also joined by John Upperton (tenor), Shulah Oliver (violin) and Natasha Gale (harp) bringing a wonderful variety of musical pieces to the audience.

Two substantial works in the programme are Kodály’s Missa Brevis and Janáček’s Otče náš (Our Father). The Missa Brevis, first performed during the siege of Budapest towards the end of the second world war, was written at a time of great uncertainty, danger and personal hardship. It is a tour-de-force — colourful, expressive, exuberant, and energetic, a choral masterpiece with a very identifiable voice. The version here is scored for organ, chorus and soloists and in fact the work received its British premiere, in an orchestrated version at the Three Choirs Festival in Worcester Cathedral in 1948.  Janáček was a fiercely spiritual agnostic when he wrote his Otče náš and it represents his faith in the community as a product of a shared Slavic heritage and spirit. Here it is scored for solo tenor, mixed chorus, organ and harp. There are wonderful moments in it as with the solo tenor’s heroic entries Thy Kingdom Come and Thy Will Be Done and the chorus’s stirring responses. 

Other pieces in the concert include Kodály’s Laudes Organi (In Praise of Organs) his last completed work with its particularly triumphant conclusion, marking a fitting end to the career of the composer whose contribution to the Hungarian choral tradition remains unrivalled; also Janáček’s Zdravas (Hail Mary), Rachmaninoff’s Bogoroditse Devo, Górecki’s Totus Tuus and Dvořák’s Goin’ Home (theme from the New World Symphony).

Do join us for a wonderful evening of music making in a glorious setting.

The Elgar Chorale of Worcester

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