Our chosen repertoire

       The aim

The Kensington Chamber Choir explores unusual and rarely performed repertoire for mixed choir, from the Late Baroque till contemporaneity. We aim to experience the different vocal techniques required for such an eclectic selection of styles, thanks to the regular support of St John’s choral scholars. Pieces marked ‘AUTUMN 2024’ will be performed in December.

 

       The pieces for 2022/2023

Antonio Vivaldi  Kyrie RV587 and Gloria RV589  (1715-20)     AUTUMN 2024

these two pieces embody the opulence of Italian Late Baroque; they showcase different textures, sung by soloists and choirs, that demand flourished vocal agility and continuous organic changes in timbre and dynamics

Giovanni Battista Pergolesi  Missa Romana  (1734)    AUTUMN 2024

Pergolesi wrote only Kyrie and Gloria to celebrate the solemn mass of Saint Emidius; each vocal part engages in acrobatic phrases which amplify the lyrical style of his celebrated Stabat Mater into a majestic yet elegant piece for double choir

Fanny Mendelssohn-Hensel  Oratorium nach den Bildern der Bibel  (1831, extracts)

dramatic and melodious, Fanny’s Oratorium is a perfect example of Early-Romantic music; the elegant classicism of the musical lines meets the intensity of the first romantics creating sentimentally charged, memorable moments that stemmed out of the mind of their all-too-long underrated composer

Gioachino Rossini  Petite Messe Solennelle  (1863, choral extracts)

a perfect mix of operatic light-heartedness and traditional choral singing (petite and solemn at once), this unusual mass defies the boundaries of the genre, offering Rossini’s unique theatrical insight and secular wit

Modest Mussorgsky  The Destruction of Sennacherib  (1874)

a powerful Russian choral piece which moves at the pace of galloping horse’s hooves, as can be found in Lord Byron’s verses that inspired the music; Mussorgsky employs the choir in muscular harmonies and a strong, rhythmical groove (sung in the English translation)

Antonín Dvořák  Mass in D  (1892)

majestic and expressive, this mass was originally composed for chamber choir and organ solo (later rearranged for orchestra and symphonic choir); the original version cover a wide range of expressive textures and moods, from intimate to triump

Rebecca Clarke  Music, When Soft Voices Die  (1907)

a beautifully crafted a cappella setting of a text by Percy Shelley; surprising chords and sudden key shifts agitate familiar harmonies in a striking example of tonal adventurousness in the English pastoral style

Claude Debussy  Trois Chansons de Charles d’Orléans  (1908)

a humorous set of a cappella songs, inspired by Renaissance polyphony yet unmistakably Debussian; suspended harmonies and modal scales are the musical materials that the composer used to reinvent the concept of the troubadours song by Charles d’Orléans (sung in medieval french)

Igor Stravinsky  Mass  (1948)

Stravinsky’s signature melodically minimal primitivism, contrasting with a rich rhythmical complexity, transform the Mass into an unusual ritual; reminiscences of ancient cultures and the allusion to those we have yet to explore let us find new ways of communication

Pauline Oliveros  Sound Patterns  (1961)    AUTUMN 2024

modernist composer Edgard Varèse famously said that music is “organised sound;” this piece exploits the imitative power of the human voice, reproducing inventive noises and colliding them together in clear musical patterns to create a sound experience of magnetic charm

Ariel Ramirez  Navidad Nuestra  (1964)

in this set of Christmas songs with Hispanic American characteristics, Ramirez gave to each episode a typical regional voice; captivating rhythms and memorable melodies invite the listener to a journey through the rich heritage of Latin music

Jo Kondo  Snow’s Falling  (2001)

suspended, static, dissonant hummed harmonies; the piano interjects slow and repetitive chords at the pace of a Japanese ritual drum; broken melodies reminiscent of musical haiku interrupt the serene flow of sounds; a calm and evocative musical landscape