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Special offer. Handel - Dettingen Te Deum

Richard Marlow (organ)

The Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge & Academy of Ancient Music, Stephen Layton

Handel - Dettingen Te Deum
Layton fervently rethinks every detail. His tempos are faultless, the Academy of Ancient Music plays as though possessed, and Neal Davies's solos lend an authority complementing the more soft-grained...

Special offer. Handel - Dettingen Te Deum

Richard Marlow (organ)

The Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge & Academy of Ancient Music, Stephen Layton

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CD

Original price $17.00 Reduced price $13.60

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44.1 kHz, 16 bit, FLAC/ALAC/WAV

Original price ($13.75) Reduced price $10.00

320 kbps, MP3

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This release includes a digital booklet

Stream now lossless, 44.1 kHz, 16 bit
Layton fervently rethinks every detail. His tempos are faultless, the Academy of Ancient Music plays as though possessed, and Neal Davies's solos lend an authority complementing the more soft-grained...

About

The Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge, is one of Britain’s great mixed choirs. Under its new director, the mercurial Stephen Layton, it has reached new heights of musical excellence in this latest disc for Hyperion. Accompanied throughout by the Academy of Ancient Music, the choir performs one of Handel’s most florid and dazzling works, the Dettingen Te Deum, which was written to celebrate King George II’s triumphal return from the Battle of Dettingen in 1743. As might be imagined, much of this work is thrillingly bellicose, but some highly cultivated writing shows the composer’s range, expressive versatility and imagination.

The disc also includes a stylish performance of the Organ Concerto No 14 in A major with Trinity’s former musical director Richard Marlow at the organ, as well as Handel’s best-loved and most gloriously ceremonial anthem, Zadok the Priest.

Contents and tracklist

I. We praise thee, O God
Track length3:53
II. All the earth doth worship thee
Track length2:31
III. To thee all angels cry aloud
Track length2:14
IV. To thee Cherubin and Seraphin continually do cry
Track length2:59
V. The glorious company of the Apostles praise thee
Track length2:17
VI. Thou art the King of Glory
Track length2:33
VII. When thou tookest upon thee to deliver man
Track length3:11
VIII. When thou hadst overcome the sharpness of death
Track length1:48
IX. Thou sittest at the right hand of God
Track length2:33
X. We believe that thou shalt come to be our judge
Track length0:41
XI. Sinfonia
Track length0:47
XII. We therefore pray thee, help thy servants
Track length1:39
XIII. Make them to be numbered with thy saints in glory everlasting
Track length1:40
XIV. Day by day we magnify thee
Track length3:18
XV. Vouchsafe, O Lord, to keep us this day without sin
Track length2:02
XVI. O Lord, in thee have I trusted
Track length3:50
I. Largo e staccato
Track length4:34
II. Organo ad libitum
Track length1:03
III. Andante
Track length3:42
IV. Grave
Track length1:25
V. Allegro
Track length6:30

Spotlight on this release

Awards and reviews

July 2008

Layton fervently rethinks every detail. His tempos are faultless, the Academy of Ancient Music plays as though possessed, and Neal Davies's solos lend an authority complementing the more soft-grained soloists from within the choir. A stylish Zadok and nimble Organ Concerto are welcome bonuses.

August 2008

Complementing the inspiriting performance of the Te Deum… is a properly overwhelming account of Zadok the Priest… and a delightfully deft one… of the A major concerto that Handel quickly recycled as the Concerto grosso Op 6 No 11.

22nd June 2008

In this excellent account of Zadock the Priest by Layton, the most striking numbers are the internalised prayers for redemption and mercy, rather than the royal brown-nosing and tub-thumping. The youthful (undergraduate) voices of Trinity’s choir sing superbly throughout, and quite magnificently in Zadok, which rounds off the disc climactically after a stylish performance of the A major Organ Concerto by Richard Marlow.

25th May 2008

Trinity College Choir go a long way to restoring the [Te Deum] here, giving it the performance it failed to get first time, when, instead of St Paul's, Handel squeezed his musicians into the chapel at St James's Palace. Great singing with sprightly playing from the Academy.

31st May 2008

Composed to celebrate George II's victory against the French in 1743 - the last time a British monarch led his troops into battle - the "Dettingen" Te Deum is often dismissed as Handelian tub-thumping. Yet, in a performance as precise and exuberant as this (wonderfully expressive diction from the Trinity Choir), its trumpet-and-drum-fuelled extroversion comes across as elementally exciting rather than merely brash.
Handel is careful, though, to leaven bellicose ceremonial with moments of quiet entreaty, as in the poignant bass solo "Vouchsafe, O Lord", sensitively sung here by Neal Davies.
Zadok the Priest is duly overwhelming, without ponderousness, while Richard Marlow's nimble performance of the organ concerto makes a delightful bonus.
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