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

Royal Free Music Society Choir Spring Concert

Bach, Vivaldi, Mozart and Boyce

Add to my Calendar 30-03-2019 19:30 30-03-2019 21:30 36 Royal Free Music Society Choir Spring Concert The Royal Free Music Society & the Hampstead Sinfonietta present an evening of music by Antonio Vivaldi, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Johann Sebastian Bach and William Boyce.    The choir will open the evening with a work of a single movement.  ‘Lobet den Herrn’ is a short but pacey motet for four parts by the German Baroque composer, Johann Sebastian Bach. The joyful hymn of praise is a setting of Psalm 117 - O praise the Lord, all ye nations (Lobet den Herrn alle Heiden). The joyful mood continues with Mozart’s ‘29th Symphony in A major’, performed by the Hampstead Sinfonietta. Composed in 1774 in Salzburg where he worked as a court musician, the graceful and energetic symphony reflects the self-confidence of the prodigious Wolfgang Amadeus, only eighteen years old at the time.  The orchestra will also perform William Boyce’s ‘Symphony no 4 in F major’.   Like the rest of London-born Boyce’s eight ‘Symphonys’ written for the theatre and the court, this delightful piece was originally composed as an overture for an opera.  By the time he wrote it, the 18th century composer had already lost his hearing.  Many will be familiar with the next piece of music as a beautiful instrumental melody played at weddings.  But in this concert, the choral interlude, ‘Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring’ will be sung by the Royal Free Music Society.  JS Bach wrote it as part of a longer cantata ‘Herz und Mund und Tat und Leben’ (‘Heart and Mouth and Deed and Life’) – based on an earlier melody byJohann Schop.  The words in English are by the poet Robert S Bridges.  Joined by four soloists and accompanied by the Hampstead Sinfonietta, the Royal Free singers will split into two choirs to perform Antonio Vivaldi’s exquisite setting of Beatus Vir.  This beautiful motet is the best known of several versions of Psalm 111 (‘Blessed is the man’) that the prolific Italian Baroque musician and priest composed to be sung in church at Vespers.  With intense rhythms and rousing melodies, the two vocal parts intertwine and echo each other - reflecting the polychoral music traditions of Vivaldi’s native Venice. Wheelchair access.  St Mark's Church, London DD/MM/YYYY

Details

St Mark's Church
Prince Albert Road
Regents Park

London
NW1 7TN
England


Programme

Johann Sebastian BachLobet den Herrn, alle Heiden (motet), BWV 230
William BoyceSymphony no.4 in F major
Johann Sebastian BachJesu, Joy of Man's Desiring
Wolfgang Amadeus MozartSymphony no.29 in A major, K.201/186a
Antonio VivaldiBeatus Vir in C major, RV 597

Performers

Benjamin Wolf – Conductor
Andrew Rochford – Conductor

Royal Free Music Society Choir
Hampstead Sinfonietta

Programme Note

The Royal Free Music Society & the Hampstead Sinfonietta present an evening of music by Antonio Vivaldi, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Johann Sebastian Bach and William Boyce.   

The choir will open the evening with a work of a single movement.  ‘Lobet den Herrn’ is a short but pacey motet for four parts by the German Baroque composer, Johann Sebastian Bach. The joyful hymn of praise is a setting of Psalm 117 - O praise the Lord, all ye nations (Lobet den Herrn alle Heiden).

The joyful mood continues with Mozart’s ‘29th Symphony in A major’, performed by the Hampstead Sinfonietta. Composed in 1774 in Salzburg where he worked as a court musician, the graceful and energetic symphony reflects the self-confidence of the prodigious Wolfgang Amadeus, only eighteen years old at the time. 

The orchestra will also perform William Boyce’s ‘Symphony no 4 in F major’.   Like the rest of London-born Boyce’s eight ‘Symphonys’ written for the theatre and the court, this delightful piece was originally composed as an overture for an opera.  By the time he wrote it, the 18th century composer had already lost his hearing. 

Many will be familiar with the next piece of music as a beautiful instrumental melody played at weddings.  But in this concert, the choral interlude, ‘Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring’ will be sung by the Royal Free Music Society.  JS Bach wrote it as part of a longer cantata ‘Herz und Mund und Tat und Leben’ (‘Heart and Mouth and Deed and Life’) – based on an earlier melody byJohann Schop.  The words in English are by the poet Robert S Bridges. 

Joined by four soloists and accompanied by the Hampstead Sinfonietta, the Royal Free singers will split into two choirs to perform Antonio Vivaldi’s exquisite setting of Beatus Vir.  This beautiful motet is the best known of several versions of Psalm 111 (‘Blessed is the man’) that the prolific Italian Baroque musician and priest composed to be sung in church at Vespers.  With intense rhythms and rousing melodies, the two vocal parts intertwine and echo each other - reflecting the polychoral music traditions of Vivaldi’s native Venice.

Wheelchair access. 

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