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Light & Gold

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Light & Gold

Released on Universal Decca, Light & Gold is Eric’s first album as both composer and conductor. Within a week of release, it became the no.1 Classical Album in the US and UK charts, received unanimous five star reviews and went on to win a Grammy® in 2012 for Best Choral Performance.

Release date: 18 October 2010

Eric Whitacre composer & conductor
Eric Whitacre Singers choir

SOPRANO Grace Davidson, Katy Hill, Eloise Irving
ALTO Ruth Gibbins, Lucy Goddard, Anne Jones
TENOR Jonathan Bungard, Benedict Hymas, Chris Tortise
BASS Peter Foggitt, Stephen Kennedy, Ashley Riches, Reuben Thomas

Laudibus choir

SOPRANO Amelia Berridge, Hannah Berridge, Charlotte Brosnan, Marie Macklin, Francesca Mastaglio, Gillian Plummer, Rachel Spencer, Louise Wayman
ALTO Felicity Buckland, Lucy Cox, Tori Longdon, Sarah Maxted, Ruth McElvanney, Bethan Moore
TENOR David Bond, Michael Bradley, Christopher Hann, Felix Leach, Christopher Palmer
BASS Dominic Barberi, Jonathan Bell, Robert Garland, David Le Prevost, Sandy Walker

The King’s Singers

COUNTERTENOR David Hurley, Timothy Wayne-Wright
TENOR Paul Phoenix
BARITONE Christopher Gabbitas, Philip Lawson
BASS Stephen Connolly

Pavão Quartet

VIOLIN Kerenza Peacock, Naomi Rump
CELLO Bryony James
VIOLA Natália Gomes

Christopher Glynn piano
Gary Lovenest, Scott Lumsdaine, Owain Williams percussion
Hila Plitmann Spoken Hebrew
Raphaël Mouterde producer & editor
Andrew Mellor sound engineer
Craig Jenkins recording assistant
Recorded at St Silas Church, Kentish Town, London (UK) in August 2010

Listen Here

Track Listing

1. Lux Aurumque 04:16
2. Five Hebrew Love Songs: Temuná (A Picture) 01:46
3. Five Hebrew Love Songs: Kalá Kallá (Light Bride) 03:08
4. Five Hebrew Love Songs: Lárov (Mostly) 00:58
5. Five Hebrew Love Songs: Éyze Shéleg! (What Snow!) 02:06
6. Five Hebrew Love Songs: Rakút (Tenderness) 02:22
7. The Seal Lullaby 04:13
8. A Boy And A Girl 04:35
9. Leonardo Dreams Of His Flying Machine 08:40
10. Three Songs Of Faith: I Will Wade Out 02:43
11. Three Songs Of Faith: Hope Faith Life Love 03:33
12. Three Songs Of Faith: I Thank You God For Most This Amazing Day 06:56
13. The Stolen Child 08:45
14. Water Night 05:27
15. Nox Aurumque 06:20
16. Sleep 05:34

From Light Into Gold: Whitacre Conducts Whitacre

Eric Whitacre: Light & Gold (San Francisco Classical Voice)

By Jason Victor Serinus

This disc is a revelation. A revelation as much to initiates who think they know the beautiful, often ethereal choral music of Eric Whitacre, as to the millions who know him only from the YouTube Virtual Choir video of “Lux Aurumque,” and as to those who have yet to make his acquaintance. There may be 67 CDs currently available in the U.S. that contain Whitacre’s music, including five devoted solely to his oeuvre, but Decca’s new Eric Whitacre: Light & Gold is the only one on which he conducts his own music and singers. And therein lies the difference.

Take, for example, the title track, “Lux Aurumque” (Light into Gold), and the last one, “Sleep.” Both appear on two other well-known all-Whitacre recordings: Polyphony’s 2006 release of Cloudburst (Hyperion) and the Elora Festival Singer’s 2010 release of Whitacre: Choral Music (Naxos). On neither will you hear the host of accents, volume gradations, and shadings that Whitacre and his singers lavish on the works. “Sleep” in particular sounds so prosaic and strophic-bound on the Elora disc that you may be tempted to either take the title as a command or skip to the next track. As for the ubiquitous “Lux Aurumque,” here it sounds almost as if it has been lavished with a new arrangement. In Whitacre’s hands, both works are mesmerizing.

And so it is with every track on Whitacre’s recording. Throughout the recital’s generous 73 minutes, performances are distinguished by the naïve, little girl sound of Whitacre’s chosen sopranos, the clarity of the diction, and the very personal touch of the composer. The texture is so personal, the quiet passages so intimate, and the silence so profound, it’s as if we have been invited into Whitacre’s inner sanctum. The Five Hebrew Love Songs (1996), for example — settings of poems by the extremely gifted high-flying soprano Hila Plitmann, who was then Whitacre’s girlfriend and is now his wife — come across as the true love offerings they are. And when a work written for The King’s Singers is performed by The King’s Singers, as it is on this disc, the word “definitive” has meaning.

The impact of Whitacre’s liner notes, which detail the genesis of each composition, cannot be denied. If you think his choral writing is sincere, wait until you read what he has to say about it. When Whitacre writes that a performance or experience moved him to tears, and then conducts the music he is talking about, it’s hard not to feel as though you’ve made the acquaintance of one of the more honest people on the planet.

As the election results come in, and lives, dreams, and the ecology of the planet hang in precarious balance, Whitacre’s gorgeous music seems like holy balm. I, for one, am grateful for the experience. Only someone of the magnitude and gravitas of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. could possibly take us to the realm of truth that Whitacre opens to us.

Jason Victor Serinus writes about music for Opera News, Opera Now, American Record Guide, Stereophile, San Francisco Magazine, Muso, Carnegie Hall Playbill, East Bay Express, East Bay Monthly, San Francisco Examiner, Bay Area Reporter, hometheaterhifi.com, and other publications.

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