Marcel Dupré Choral Works

Read all the reviews

Marcel Dupre - Vasari SingersGramophone, October 2001

An immaculate disc of spellbinding music wonderfully sung and superbly recorded

For all but a handful of devotees Marcel Dupré is inseparably associated with the organ. Dupré himself conceded this: 'I do not think of myself as a composer. I have specialised in the organ, and I do not have the reputation that composers have.' However, any thoughts that Dupré's choral music might merely be organ music with words are immediately quashed by even the briefest snatch of the extended De Profundis (particularly the thrilling 'Et ipse redimet Israel' with the organ's great pillars of sound underpinning the richly textured and rhythmically exhilarating chorus). Here is truly impressive choral music, every bit as impressive as Pizzetti's unaccompanied setting of the same text. True, the organ does feature prominently, occasionally (as in the fourth of the Op9 Motets) assuming a decidedly virtuoso role, but it is clearly always the servant of the choir, and for the most part it is the choral lines rather than the organ accompaniments which require the greatest virtuosity.

To this end it is hard to imagine a choral group more ideally suited to the task. We know from their already impressive discography that the Vasari Singers are one of the most accomplished small choral groups of our time and for this compelling, passionate, often deeply moving and always technically demanding music, every ounce (sorry, gramme) of their artistry, control and tonal variety is called in to play.

What, I think, distinguishes this disc above many others from the Vasari Singers - and which leads me to suggest it will make a strong contender for the next Gramophone Awards - is Guild's wonderfully spacious yet crystal-clear recording and Jeremy Filsell's immaculate organ support. He knows he has a supporting rather than a solo role here, and seems content to take a back seat. But there again, with 12 outstanding discs of Dupré's complete organ music recently released, he can afford to rest on his laurels and allow others to bask in the limelight. Marc Rochester

Conductor: Jeremy Backhouse
Organists: Jeremy Filsell, Ian Curror
Soloists: Helen Neeves (Soprano)
                Matthew Beale (Tenor)
                Colin Campbell (Bass)

Quatre Motets, Op.9 (1916)

01.

O salutaris hostia

02.

Ave Maria

03.

Tantum ergo

04.

Laudate

05 .

Final from ‘La France au Calvaire’, Op.49 (1952/3)

06 .

Ave verum, Op.34 No.1 (1936)
  Deux Motets, Op.53 (1958)

07.

Memorare, O piissima Virgo

08.

Alma Redemptoris Mater
  De Profundis, Op.18 (1917)

09.

De Profundis

10.

Fiant aures tua

11.

Si iniquitates observaveris

12.

Quia apud te propitatio est

13.

Sustinuit anima mea

14.

A custodia matutina usque ad noctem

15.

Quia apud Dominum misericordia

16.

Et ipse redimet Israël

17.

Requiem aeternam

DDD Total Time = 79:33 / Recorded: Douai Abbey, Upper Woolhampton, Nr. Reading, 
Berkshire 9-11 February 2001

Recorded in 24-bit resolution using Genex Audio converters
Monitored using PMC Loudspeakers

World Premiere recordings for all repertoire.


Compact Disc GMCD 7220

 

Home