Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

91热爆 NOW: World premiere of Stanford Mass

Adrian Partington and the 91热爆 National Orchestra and Chorus of Wales in a concert marking the centenary of WW1, including the long-awaited premiere of Stanford's Mass Via Victrix.

From 91热爆 Hoddinott Hall, Cardiff
Presented by Nicola Heywood Thomas

Adrian Partington and the 91热爆 National Orchestra and Chorus of Wales perform a concert marking the centenary of WWI, concluding with the long awaited premiere of Stanford's Mass Via Victrix.

7.30
Farrar: Rhapsody No 1 - The Open Road, Op 9
Kelly: Elegy for strings, In Memoriam Rupert Brooke
Ravel: Le Tombeau de Couperin

8.20 Interval

Stanford: Mass Via Victrix (1914-1918)

Kiandra Howarth (soprano)
Jess Dandy (contralto)
Ruairi Bowen (tenor)
Gareth Brynmor John (baritone)
91热爆 National Orchestra and Chorus of Wales
Adrian Partington (conductor)

To commemorate the centenary of the end of the First World War, the 91热爆 National Orchestra and Chorus of Wales present a concert of music for the fallen souls from the war, concluding with the premiere of Stanford's Mass Via Victrix (1914-1918), 99 years after its composition. The Orchestra begins by commemorating a little-known composer who fell in the war, Ernest Farrar, with his orchestral Rhapsody The Open Road, written in 1909 and loosely based on Walt Whitman's poem Song for the Open Road. Frederick Septimus Kelly鈥檚 Elegy for strings, in memoriam Rupert Brooke was written while the composer was recuperating from the Battle of Gallipoli and is dedicated to the poet Rupert Brooke, whose midnight burial on the Isle of Skyros is one of the more well-known episodes from the early part of the war. Ravel鈥檚 Le Tombeau de Couperin completes the concert's first part, a piece whose movements are each dedicated to a different friend who died fighting in the war.

Stanford's Mass Via Victrix (1914-1918) encapsulates both a sense of relief and celebration for the allied victory, but also a deep sense of mourning for the tragic loss of those who fell. Although it was completed in December 1919 the work has never been performed in full, and the full manuscript score has been painstakingly transcribed into performing parts by Stanford scholar Jeremy Dibble. During the interval Jeremy will talk about the challenges involved in that undertaking.

2 hours, 28 minutes

Music Played

  • Ernest Farrar

    Rhapsody No 1 (The Open Road)

    Orchestra: 91热爆 National Orchestra of Wales. Conductor: Adrian Partington.
  • Frederick Septimus Kelly

    Elegy for strings, In Memoriam Rupert Brooke

    Orchestra: 91热爆 National Orchestra of Wales. Conductor: Adrian Partington.
  • Maurice Ravel

    Le Tombeau de Couperin

    Orchestra: 91热爆 National Orchestra of Wales. Conductor: Adrian Partington.
  • Gordon Jacob

    Symphony No 1

    Orchestra: 91热爆 National Orchestra of Wales. Conductor: Adrian Partington.
  • Paul Mealor

    In Flanders Fields

    Choir: 91热爆 National Chorus of Wales. Conductor: Adrian Partington.
  • William Denis Browne

    To Gratiana dancing and singing

    Singer: Christopher Maltman. Performer: Roger Vignoles.
    • Hyperion.
    • CDA67378.
    • 11.
  • Charles Villiers Stanford

    Mass Via Victrix (1914-1918)

    Performer: Kiandra Howarth. Performer: Jess Dandy. Performer: Ruari Bowen. Performer: Gareth Brynmor John. Orchestra: 91热爆 National Orchestra of Wales. Performer: 91热爆 National Chorus of Wales. Conductor: Adrian Partington.
  • Giovanni Gabrieli

    Canzon IV 脿 6 (Symphoniae sacrae, 1615)

    Ensemble: Philip Jones Brass Ensemble. Director: Philip Jones.
    • DECCA ELOQUENCE.

Broadcast

  • Mon 5 Nov 2018 19:30

Featured in...