Stabat Mater Music by Karl Jenkins
Price: £ 12
1. Cantus lacrimosus
2. Incantation Listen
3. Vidit Jesum in tormentis
4. Lament
5. Sancta Mater
6. Now my life is only weeping.
7. And the Mother did weep
8. Virgo virginum
9. Are you lost out in darkness?
10. Ave verum
11. Fac, ut portem Christi mortem
12. Paradisi gloria
Belinda Sykes vocal
Jurguta Adamonyte mezzo-soprano
Ian Tracey chorus director
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Chorus
EMO Ensemble conducted by Pasi Hyökki
Following the success of This Land of Ours, a set of arrangements for brass band and male voice choir that took Britain’s most popular living composer back to his Welsh roots, Karl Jenkins returns with a new work to complement his massively successful Requiem and The Armed Man.
The at once emotional, modern, culturally diverse and universally accessible style that has come to characterise the composer’s sound is perfectly exemplified in this poignant new choral album.
Stabat Mater is a thirteenth century Roman Catholic sequence attributed to Jacopone da Todi. It has been set to music by many composers, among them Haydn, Dvorak, Vivaldi, Rossini, Pergolesi, Stanford, Gounod, Penderecki, Poulenc, Szymanowski, Alessandro Scarlatti (1724), Domenico Scarlatti (1715), Pedro de Escobar, Arvo Pärt and Giuseppe Verdi.
Its title is an abbreviation of the first line, Stabat Mater Dolorosa ("The sorrowful mother was standing"). The hymn, one of the most powerful and immediate of medieval poems, meditates on the suffering of Mary, Jesus Christ's mother, during his crucifixion.
Karl's setting extends this to a universal depiction of grief by using ancient text from the area (Holy Land/Middle East) that will be sung in Hebrew, Greek and Aramaic (the lingua franca of the period) and a contemporary poem, sung in English. The orchestration includes instruments indigenous to the area, percussion such as the darbuka and riq and the woodwind duduk.
There are two soloists, Jurgita Adamonyte and Belinda Sykes, who doubles on duduk or mey, a middle eastern ancient woodwind instrument.
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Liverpool Daily Post Review
"...there were moments of extreme, soul-searching beauty: And the Mother Did Weep, for instance, or the setting of Ave Verum Corpus...
The pure clarity and note perfection of Jurgita Adamonyte contrasted with the considerable skill of Belinda Sykes whose interpretation of Middle Eastern inspired melody, along with her performances on the dudek, a double-reeded Armenian instrument, was often spine-tingling"



