A World Requiem

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FOULDS
A World Requiem
Jeanne-MichAle Charbonnet, Catherine Wyn-Rogers, Stuart Skelton, Gerald Finley / BBC Symphony Chorus & Orchestra / Leon Botstein

[ Chandos / 2 Hybrid SACD ]

Release Date: Tuesday 1 January 2008

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 6 weeks from when you place your order.

"The revival of this important work after more than 80 years on Remembrance Sunday 2007 was well-justified by the commitment of the performers. It was wonderfully captured by the engineers and the set is beautifully presented too."
(MusicWeb Recording of the Year 2008)

Hybrid/SACD - playable on all compact disc players.

MusicWeb - Recording of the Year 2008

"The revival of this important work after more than 80 years on Remembrance Sunday 2007 was well-justified by the commitment of the performers. It was wonderfully captured by the engineers and the set is beautifully presented too."
(MusicWeb)

This is a world premiere recording of this strangely neglected masterpiece.

This is a live concert recording, a recording of its first performance for many, many years.

It is released on a surround-sound hybrid SA-CD
'It went deeper down and reached higher up, it was bigger, broader, nobler and reached out more into the eternal than music as it is commonly understood and interpreted, or as any music than that heard by the great masters, has ever done. It is indeed a world heritage.' Thus wrote the Labour MP Frederick Pethick-Lawrence after attending the premiere of A World Requiem on Armistice Night 1923, and his statement was typical of the audience reaction on that night. Adopted by the British Legion as the centrepiece of its Armistice Night celebrations from 1923 to 1926 at the Royal Albert Hall but not heard since then, the Manchester-born John Foulds's heartfelt memorial to the war dead of all nations is here revived under the American conductor Leon Botstein in a spectacular recreation of those original Festival of Remembrance performances.

With international soloists (Jeanne-Michèle Charbonnet, Catherine Wyn-Rogers, Stuart Skelton and Gerald Finley), massed choirs, the BBC Symphony Orchestra, off-stage fanfares and the great organ of the Royal Albert Hall, this performance presents music on a huge scale. Very different in nature from Benjamin Britten's War Requiem of forty years later, Foulds's A World Requiem is nevertheless a significant forerunner in its deeply pacifist inspiration, its use of mixed, only partly liturgical text, its varied instrumental forces, and its relation to the 1914-18 War. Indeed it dared to offer itself as a public statement as a focus for a national or even an international act of remembrance. Its relation to war is much more direct as it was composed in the immediate aftermath of the conflict. Foulds stated that it was conceived as 'a tribute to the memory of the Dead - a message of consolation to the bereaved of all countries', and in its ardent invocation of peace it leans towards the mystical.

This modern revival is long overdue and may now demonstrate that the work's relevance is both timeless and contemporary.