Allegri Miserere by candlelight
Part of the Brandenburg Choral Festival of London 2018 Autumn Series
Add to my Calendar 25-10-2018 21:30 25-10-2018 23:30 36 Allegri Miserere by candlelight I Dodici returns to the Brandenburg Choral Festival of London in a varied programme based around Allegri’s famous Miserere, with several of the works featured harking back to Renaissance chant. The chosen composers span the ages, from Allegri, Gesualdo and Parsons in the 15th and 16th centuries, via Britten, Elgar, Grieg, Poulenc, Rachmaninov and Stanford in the 1800s and 1900s, and up to the present day with the a new work by choir member John Bachelor, a setting of Tennyson’s The Passing of Arthur. Join us in the beautiful surroundings of a candlelit St Martin’s for this hour-long concert of a cappella choral music, both old and new. For more information please click here. St Martin-in-the-Fields, London DD/MM/YYYYDetails
St Martin-in-the-Fields
Trafalgar Square
Westminster
London
WC2N 4JJ
England
Programme
Manolo da Rold – Vi Adoro
Edvard Grieg – Ave maris stella, EG 150
Carlo Gesualdo – O vos omnes
Robert Parsons – Ave Maria
Francis Poulenc – Videntes stellam, FP 150 no.3
Edward Elgar – My Love dwelt in a Northern Land, Op.18 no.3
John Bachelor – The Passing of Arthur
Charles Villiers Stanford – 3 Motets: Beati quorum via
Benjamin Britten – A Hymn to the Virgin
Charles Villiers Stanford – The Blue Bird (arr. James Graham)
Gregorio Allegri – Miserere
Jan Sandström – Es ist ein ros entsprungen
Sergei Rachmaninov – All-night Vigil (Vespers): Bogoroditse Devo
Performers
Gabriel Chernick – Conductor
I Dodici
Other concerts in this Series (+)
Programme Note
I Dodici returns to the Brandenburg Choral Festival of London in a varied programme based around Allegri’s famous Miserere, with several of the works featured harking back to Renaissance chant. The chosen composers span the ages, from Allegri, Gesualdo and Parsons in the 15th and 16th centuries, via Britten, Elgar, Grieg, Poulenc, Rachmaninov and Stanford in the 1800s and 1900s, and up to the present day with the a new work by choir member John Bachelor, a setting of Tennyson’s The Passing of Arthur. Join us in the beautiful surroundings of a candlelit St Martin’s for this hour-long concert of a cappella choral music, both old and new.
For more information please click here.