Gustav Holst: The Cloud Messenger/The Hymn Of Jesus
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
The Hymn of Jesus is unquestionably one of the greatest choral works ever composed and arguably Holst's finest work of any type. It does everything that music for chorus can do: there are passages for both full and semi-chorus with haunting wordless vocalization, whispering, humming, and unaccompanied polyphony. The music ranges from actual Gregorian chant to the space music that made The Planets the composer's most popular work. And it all takes only 20 minutes or so. The Cloud Messenger features many of the same elements, though developed on a larger scale. It's amazing that this major work had to wait until the 1990s for its first recording. This is it, and it's superb. --David Hurwitz
Gustav Holst: The Cloud Messenger/The Hymn Of Jesus, Music, Gustav Holst, Richard Hickox, London Symphony Chorus, London Symphony Orchestra, Della Jones, Choral, Classical, Classical Music, Sacred Choral Music with orchestra, Secular Choral Music a capella
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Holst: The Cloud Messenger; A Choral Fantasia; Part-Songs
Manufacturer: Chandos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000IYN5 Release Date: 1999-05-18 |
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Customer Reviews:
More than just choral works.......2006-04-20
Get This For the Hymn of Jesus.......2002-09-07
I can only comment on half this disc, as I own the Cloud Messanger and the Hymn of Jesus only in an earlier incarnation. The Cloud Messanger is a massive work based on an Hindu text. It is of variable quality...Holst himself flet that it was not wholy a success and supressed further performances of it in his lifetime. But the passages that are good are stunning indeed, and Hickox and crew make a strong case for the work.
The reason to get this CD is for the Hymn of Jesus. This is the best performance of the best work that Holst composed. The Hymn of Jesus is based on Holst's own translation of a passage from the Gnostic Gospel of Thomas ( some sources claim the Acts of John as the origin of this text, but I'm pretty sure I have it in my copy of the Gospel of Thomas, which had recently been discovered at the time.)These Gnostic texts so intrigued Holst that he studied Greek just to be able to read it in the original. The work begins with a beautiful, atmospheric prelude based on two Sarum chants, Panea Lingua and a resplendant Vexilla Regis in the boy choir. Then there is a massive choral invocation to God and the Hymn is sung. This text is also known as the Round Dance of Jesus, and Holst goes for the dance in the piece, with a splendid section in 5/4 which must have frightened the Edwardian audience at the work's premiere. Tightly organized and stunning in it's choral effects, this version of the work surpasses even the fine old recording by Sir Charles Grove.
I can't comment on the performances of the other works on the second disc, but know that the Ode to Death is haunting and the Choral Fantasia is a major work worth hearing. But the reason to buy this album is for the Hymn. It's a stunning and neglected masterpiece in the English choral tradition.
An important record of lesser known choral works . . ........2000-08-08
My primary interest in this CD was the recording of the relatively recently re-discovered (1984) major choral work "The Cloud Messenger." From Holst's "India" period, this is a stunningly beautiful "painting" of the Khalidasa 6th Century A.D. lyric poem, "Meghaduta" ("Cloud Messenger"), the lament of an exiled yaksa who is pining for his beloved on a lonely mountain peak. When, at the beginning of the monsoon, a cloud perches on the peak, he asks it to deliver a message to his love in the Himalayan city of Alaka. Most of the poem consists of a description of the landmarks, cities, and terrain on the cloud's route to Alaka, interspersed with admonishments to the cloud to "Tarry not!" It is only at the end that we are finally aware of the message itself -- one intended to comfort the yaksa's wife in her loneliness.
I had the privilege of singing the U.S. premiere of this work in 1996 with Masterworks Chorale in San Mateo, CA, a chorus of about 150 auditioned singers. This work needs such a large choral force, and a conductor who can deal with the inherent drama in the text. We had both, and the performance was a stunning success. (It was the final work on a program that opened with Debussy's "La damoiselle Elue" for women's voices and mezzo-soprano and soprano soloists; and Brahms' "Alto Rhapsody" for men's voices and mezzo-soprano soloist. "The Cloud Messenger" also includes a mezzo-soprano soloist.)
My biggest complaint with this recording is the dynamics. The entire work seems to be performed at about mf+, occasionally venturing into f and mp. Unfortunately, this doesn't do justice to the drama. The opening, for example, needs to grow from the first ppp gentle raindrops, building as the cloud builds in strength, to a glorious ff choral introduction of the main character, the cloud: "O Thou, who com'st from heaven's king! scion of a noble race! who wearest wondrous forms at will!"
There are parts of this work that beg for a lush warm sound; what we hear on this recording is the British "boy choir" sound in the treble range, while the men have a warmer (albeit somewhat watered down) tone. This is a highly sensuous work, full of luscious ripe sensual imagery: "Where e'er thou goest, lonely wives, who pine in solitude with close-bound hair, will arise and go along the road. Thou bringest home their absent husbands, who will loosen their tresses and fill their hearts with joy!" The "flat" sound of pre-pubescent boys just doesn't do this music, or mature text, justice.
That said, however, this is an important recording of a little-known work. You'll get the feeling of the piece, a sense of the promise. Let's hope that a large chorus paired with a sensitive conductor will have an opportunity at another recording of this in the not-too-distant future (Atlanta? Chicago?).
Contrast this with "The Hymn of Jesus" -- Hickox fares much better with this material, playing up the dance rhythms (Holst knew what he was doing -- at the climax of the piece, the words are: "Ye who dance not, know not what we are knowing.") It really is a first-rate performance of this work.
Other works deserving special mention are "Dirge for Two Veterans," in which one can hear hints of "Mars" from "The Planets"; "Ode to Death," a setting of Walt Whitman's "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd," which contains allusions to "Saturn." The Four Partsongs on the second disk are among Holst's earliest works, written in 1894, when he was barely 20 yrs old and in his second year at the Royal College of Music; and the Choral Fantasia is among his later choral works, written in 1931.
Highly recommended, even with its flaws.
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Gustav Holst: The Cloud Messenger/The Hymn Of Jesus
Gustav Holst , Richard Hickox , London Symphony Chorus , London Symphony Orchestra , and Della Jones Manufacturer: Chandos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000000ALV Release Date: 1992-09-30 |
Tracks:
Amazon.com
The Hymn of Jesus is unquestionably one of the greatest choral works ever composed and arguably Holst's finest work of any type. It does everything that music for chorus can do: there are passages for both full and semi-chorus with haunting wordless vocalization, whispering, humming, and unaccompanied polyphony. The music ranges from actual Gregorian chant to the space music that made The Planets the composer's most popular work. And it all takes only 20 minutes or so. The Cloud Messenger features many of the same elements, though developed on a larger scale. It's amazing that this major work had to wait until the 1990s for its first recording. This is it, and it's superb. --David HurwitzTrack Listings:
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