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Part 2

Presented by Mary Ann Kennedy. Concluding a concert with a Scottish slant, the ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Singers perform works by MacMillan, Black, Blackhall, Vaughan Williams, Boughton and Schumann.

Presented by Mary Ann Kennedy

In this live broadcast the ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Singers bring choral music with a Scottish flavour to the Perth Festival, drawing both on the riches of Scotland's musical past and on its present.

From the 16th century, music by the great Robert Carver - monk at Scone Abbey - and by his contemporaries Robert Johnson and David Peebles.

Scotland's more recent cultural history is represented in a strikingly virtuosic setting of William Dunbar's words by Thea Musgrave (born in Edinburgh), a haunting Celtic lament by James Macmillan, music by Master of the Queen's Music, and modern-day Orcadian settler, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies.

Completing the programme, the UK premiere of a piece by the ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Singers' Associate Composer Gabriel Jackson - a seascape setting words by Latvian poet Doris Kareva, a choral classic by Ralph Vaughan Williams, works with a Celtic slant by Rutland Boughton and Granville Bantock, and - a real curiosity - settings, in German, of Robert Burns' words by the great German Romantic composer Robert Schumann, who was born 200 years ago this year.

James MacMillan: Mairi
John Black: O Lord, how many enemies have I
Andrew Blackhall: O God my strength and fortitude; When as we sat in Babylon
Vaughan Williams: Three Shakespeare Songs
Rutland Boughton: Celtic Lullaby
Schumann: Five songs for chorus, op 55

ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Singers
David Hill (conductor).

1 hour, 10 minutes

Last on

Wed 26 May 2010 20:05

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  • Wed 26 May 2010 20:05