Guildford Cathedral “Flower Gala”

October 3rd, 2009 Comments off

The Guildford Cathedral “Flower Gala” – A feast of flowers arranged by over three hundred flower arrangers from churches and flower clubs across the Diocese. There will be over seventy displays, including a garden in the centre of the Cathedral complete with silver birches.

Guildford Cathedral is the mother church of the Diocese of Guildford, covering 500 square miles of Surrey, north east Hampshire, the London Borough of Kingston and a part of West Sussex. With a seating capacity of 1000, the Cathedral provides both focus and resource for the whole community, a venue for concerts, art and education, a place of pilgrimage, as well as stillness, prayer and daily choral worship.


HAVPCD352 – THROUGH THE DAY. Guildford Cathedral Choir

Through the day – a CD of “Favourite Anthems” recorded by the boys, girls and men of Guildford Cathedral Choir, directed by Katherine Dienes-Williams and David Davies has just been released on the Herald label.

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Quicker ways to find what you’re looking for

September 14th, 2009 Comments off

We’ve extended and hopefully improved the way in which you can list all the discs published on the Herald AV label. You can now list all the “Discs by Choir“, “Discs by Conductor” and “Discs by Location” from the drop-down options on the “Catalogue” button in the top menu bar.

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BBC Radio 4 – “Tales before the Stave”

August 22nd, 2009 Comments off

The Radio 4 programme, “Tales before the Stave” -
HAVPCD151 – Christmas in Royal Anglo-Saxon Winchester.
10th-century Chant from the Winchester Troper

Francis Fyfield unpicks the hidden codes of a beautiful 11th-century manuscript that confirms that the English were pioneers of musical notation long before the arrival of staves.

With the help of Professor Susan Rankin and the French performer Dominique Vellard, Francis tells the story of the Winchester Troper, a tiny book belonging to Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, and written in Winchester around the year 1030, and how scholars have used it to clarify the way musical notation developed in the 11th and 12th centuries.

The magical discovery in the Troper was that polyphony, the use of two-part harmony, which many thought did not appear in manuscript form before the 13th century, was actually captured by the cantor scribbling in the Troper at a time when Winchester was at the heart of Anglo Saxon culture. This little book provides us with insights into the soundscape of Edward the Confessor’s England.
But it only does so thanks to the scholars like Susan and Dominique who have deciphered what looks like modern shorthand notation.

The programme describes the process of unravelling the musical language and how that fits in to the broader story of the development of musical notation in Europe. Frances tries to get an idea of who this cantor was who managed to preserve a golden era of Anglo Saxon music well before the universal staves and notes were developed to simplify the process.

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Audio Downloads – now better quality in FLAC format

May 20th, 2009 Comments off

We have always worked to create the best listening experience on CD – using advanced microphones and equipment during the recording phase and ensuring the quality is maintained at every stage in production.

This website has a number of “previews” of the recordings available on the Herald AV Publication label which are in a “lossy”, or reduced quality form – encoded in low bitrate MP3 files.

flac_audio_logo

As an experiment we are now making some recordings available in the FLAC, “Free Lossless Audio Codec” format which offers a significant improvement in playback quality. These files are available for download via the “Free!” page.

You will need to download and install an additional Audio Codec in order to listen to these files which is available here at the Xiph website. Please download the “Current Stable Version”!

HAVPCD345 – Catholic Collection II

May 5th, 2009 Comments off

HAVPCD345 – Catholic Collection II

HAVPCD345 – Catholic Collection II

I am delighted to support this wonderful recording of music by the Choirs of Leeds Cathedral, under the Director of Music, Benjamin Saunders. Below the altar in our Cathedral, we have the relics of two of the English Martyrs, who gave their lives for the Faith during the 16th Century. We are closely linked to the suffering Church through these two witnesses to the Truth, Blessed Peter Snow and Blessed Ralph Grimston, who were martyred in Yorkshire during penal times. Therefore it is a great joy that this recording will help the Catholic Charity, Aid to the Church in Need, in their work for those who are persecuted, oppressed or in pastoral need. For in so many parts of the world today people are in need of the consoling love of Christ and the Resurrection hope that He offers us. I pray that this recording – which is a celebration of God’s love – will inspire all listeners in faith, hope and charity. May Our Lady, St Anne and all the martyrs encourage and strengthen us all.

HAVPCD344 – British Fantasies & Fanfares

May 5th, 2009 Comments off

HAVPCD344  – British Fantasies & Fanfares

HAVPCD344 – British Fantasies & Fanfares

This programme is happily not just another ‘English cathedral organ music’ compilation although elements within it may be familiar in that context. The key to the chemistry of the mix is the word ‘fantasy’. This term is one much used by composers of the early 20th century. It referred to compositions in one movement which drew their inspiration from the form of the same name of the first Elizabethan period and was much encouraged by Walter Cobbett (1847-1937) who founded an annual composition competition to encourage composers to write in the form. None of the works on this disc relate to that competition.

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HAVPCD342 – Evensong for St Peter’s Day

May 5th, 2009 Comments off

HAVPCD342 – Evensong for St Peter’s Day

HAVPCD342 – Evensong for St Peter’s Day

Exeter became a cathedral city in 1050 when King Edward the Confessor came in person to install Leofric as the first Bishop of Exeter. We share with Westminster Abbey, both our founder, and our patron saint, St Peter. By tradition the festival of St Peter is held each year on June 29th. In medieval times the festival was marked by the lighting of a bonfire on the cathedral green and the making of shields. It has been suggested this may have been for Decani v. Cantoris horseback battles! Today the festival (without bonfires and battles) is attended by the Friends of Exeter Cathedral. Since 1929 the Friends have assisted the Dean and Chapter in preserving and improving the fabric and furnishings of this wonderful building together with its music and its archives, thereby helping to maintain the long tradition of worship and praise for years to come. This recording follows the traditional order of Evensong according to the Book of Common Prayer but with an added celebratory ‘Te Deum’.

HAVPCD341 – Pray the Rosary with Cardinal Newman

May 5th, 2009 Comments off

HAVPCD341  – Pray the Rosary with Cardinal Newman

HAVPCD341 – Pray the Rosary with Cardinal Newman

According to tradition, the Rosary devotion in its entirety was revealed to St Dominic by Our Lady herself. Sceptics have other theories, but it is certain that the cycle of 150 prayers, corresponding to the 150 Psalms, was promoted for the use of the laity by the late Middle Ages. The pattern of three sets of five meditations, reflecting the birth, death and resurrection of Christ as seen through the eyes of His Mother, is certainly very old, although it took time for the exact choice of meditations to become fixed, as it has remained for the last five hundred years. The essential facts of our Redemption were summarised in just those three moments, birth, death and resurrection (as they are in the writings of St Paul). The moods of joy,sorrow and glory are also the classic moods through which a life of prayer develops, as described in many spiritual writers. After the joy of first conversion comes the sorrow of the struggle with the various forms of difficulty in prayer, until the break-through into glory. Yet all three moods can co-exist in one person, as seen so dramatically in the life of Blessed Teresa of Calcutta. Radiating joy to those around her,she experienced deep sorrow in her solidarity with suffering humanity, at times unconscious of the heart of glory within her.

HAVPCD340 – Commotio – Night

May 5th, 2009 Comments off

HAVPCD340  – Commotio – Night

HAVPCD340 – Commotio – Night

Commotio is one of Oxford’s foremost chamber choirs, formed in August 1999 to provide a refreshing alternative to the more readily available repertoire offered by most other choral groups, primarily performing lesser-known material of the 20th and 21st centuries. Matthew Berry, the founder and conductor of the choir, enthusiastically promotes the work of a younger generation of composers, as well as bringing to the fore little-known works of more established writers. In December 2002 Commotio performed the world première of Pierre Villette’s Inviolata, and in June 2007 Night for Choir and Cello by Richard Allain. They have also performed UK premières of works by Jon Mostad, Peter Klatzow, and Frank Ferko. In June 2005, the choir recorded a CD of works by Peter Klatzow entitled Towards the Light (Herald HAVP316), receiving extremely positive reviews from Musical Opinion, International Record Review and Gramophone among many others. The choir has also contributed to a portfolio CD of works by the young British composer Thomas Hyde, to be released on Toccata Classics in 2008.

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HAVPCD339 – Richard Pantcheff

May 5th, 2009 Comments off

HAVPCD339 – Richard Pantcheff

HAVPCD339 – Richard Pantcheff

Whilst internationally renowned as a composer in many genres, Richard Pantcheff has established a particular reputation as a specialist composer of Choral and Organ music. Many of his works have been commissioned and performed by the major Cathedral and College Choirs of the UK and Germany, including those of Salisbury, Winchester, St Paul’s, and Glasgow Cathedrals, as well as the choirs of Magdalen College and Lincoln College, Oxford, and the Clerks of Christ Church.
His music has been performed extensively in the UK, as well as in the USA, the Caribbean, Germany, Italy, and, most recently, New Zealand.
Much of his output for Organ has been published, distributed, and performed around the world, and his choral and organ works have been broadcast in the US, the UK, and the Caribbean. A large number of his compositions have appeared on commercially-released CDs, to wide critical acclaim, most recent of which has been the recording of Five Elizabethan Lyrics, on the SOMM label.

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