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MAURICE GREENE

SELECT ANTHEMS

The Choir of New College Oxford
Gary Cooper, Timothy Morris organ

directed by Edward Higginbottom

CRD 3484

Born one year after the death of Purcell, Maurice Greene is one of the most attractive of the minor English composers. A contemporary of Bach and Handel, it is his inheritance of a distinctively English style, with Purcell as a strong element in it, that gives his work its special flavour. The Purcellian character is apparent in Lord, let me know mine end, which opens this recording. Then, in The King shall rejoice, which immediately brings Handel to mind, we find a composer who is very much his own man, with a gift for melody and counterpoint. He has the good taste to know the value of simplicity, but he is also capable of dramatic effect, as at the entry of the full choir in God is our hope and strength.

Recorded in New College Chapel
15-16 April 1991
Playing time : 69'41"   DDD


Reviews


"New College Choir sings well throughout. Tone, phrasing, articulation are all admirable, and there is some creditable solo work, especially by the tenor in Thou visitest the earth."

The Gramophone


MAURICE GREENE (1696-1755)

1     Lord let me know mine end

Nicholas Witcomb, Guy Head treble

2     The King shall rejoice

Fergus McLusky alto ; Daniel Norman tenor ;
Michael Morton bass
Stephen Taylor alto ; Mark Milhofer tenor ;
Timothy West bass

3     How long wilt thou forget me, O Lord?

Nicholas Witcomb, Jerome Finnis treble

4     Voluntary No 1 in G major

Gary Cooper organ

5     God is our hope and strength

Philip Hallchurch, Guy Head treble ;
Fergus McLusky, Duncan Saunderson alto ;
Toby Spence tenor ;
Michael Morton, Richard Lea bass

6     Have mercy upon me, O God

Stephen Taylor, Duncan Saunderson,
Ashley Stafford alto

7     Voluntary No 11 in B minor

Gary Cooper organ

8     Let God arise

Duncan Saunderson alto ; Daniel Norman tenor ; Michael Morton bass
Stephen Taylor alto ; Mark Milhofer tenor ;
Michael Morton bass

9     O clap your hands together
10   Thou visitest the earth
        (excerpt from Thou, O God, art praised in Sion)

Toby Spence tenor