George Lloyd - Lloyd: A Litany & A Symphonic Mass (2024)

  • 03 May, 07:16
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Artist:
Title: Lloyd: A Litany & A Symphonic Mass
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: Lyrita
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks + booklet)
Total Time: 1:41:19
Total Size: 460 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra & Brighton Festival Chorus – A Symphonic Mass: I. Kyrie (07:52)
2. Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra & Brighton Festival Chorus – A Symphonic Mass: II. Gloria (11:06)
3. Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra & Brighton Festival Chorus – A Symphonic Mass: III. Credo (13:37)
4. Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra – A Symphonic Mass: IV. Offertorium (03:04)
5. Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra & Brighton Festival Chorus – A Symphonic Mass: V. Sanctus - VI. Benedictus (11:48)
6. Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra & Brighton Festival Chorus – A Symphonic Mass: VII. Agnus Dei (08:20)
7. Jeremy White, Guildford Choral Society & Philharmonia Orchestra – A Litany, Pt. 1 "Father of Heaven": Allegro dramatico (10:46)
8. Jeremy White, Guildford Choral Society, Philharmonia Orchestra & Janice Watson – A Litany, Pt. 2 "O Holy Ghost": Allegro (11:11)
9. Guildford Choral Society & Philharmonia Orchestra – A Litany, Pt. 3 "For That Fair Blessed Mother-Maid": Adagio (06:03)
10. Jeremy White, Guildford Choral Society, Philharmonia Orchestra & Janice Watson – A Litany, Pt. 4 "From Being Anxious, or Secure": Vivace (17:28)

‘I just write what I have to write’. The artistic credo of George Lloyd conveys the directness and emotional honesty of his music, which is distinctive and written with integrity. He was fortunate enough to discover his individual and versatile musical voice at an early age. The deceptively artless quality of his scores stems from a thorough grounding in composition techniques. He wrote in a traditional idiom enriched by a close study of selected models, Verdi and Berlioz chief among them. There is a remarkable consistency to his output, most of which was created spontaneously and without the incentive of a commission. Conceived on a grand scale, Lloyd’s late choral works build fruitfully upon his previous experience in other genres. They share with his operas an innate lyricism, natural affinity with the human voice and feeling for the long line, while their structural balance, intensive working out of motifs and rich orchestral palette owes a significant debt to his prolific symphonic output. Chris de Souza writing in The Independent, 1998, described the Brighton Festival commission of A Symphonic Mass as ‘perhaps the climax’ of Lloyd’s ‘astonishing career’. In his review of the original release of the present recording, Ivan March was moved to describe the Mass as ‘one of the finest pieces of English choral writing of the twentieth century’.