English composer George Dyson has fared well since the modernist stranglehold on concert programming was broken, and the rediscovery of his Choral Symphony in 2014, in Oxford University's Bodleian Library, was cause for celebration. The symphony was a student work (if doctoral), but it is largely the equal of the later St. Paul's Voyage to Melita, appearing on the album as a natural complement with its ocean imagery. The Choral Symphony is just that: not an oratorio, but a set of discrete choral movements (much of the first ...
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English composer George Dyson has fared well since the modernist stranglehold on concert programming was broken, and the rediscovery of his Choral Symphony in 2014, in Oxford University's Bodleian Library, was cause for celebration. The symphony was a student work (if doctoral), but it is largely the equal of the later St. Paul's Voyage to Melita, appearing on the album as a natural complement with its ocean imagery. The Choral Symphony is just that: not an oratorio, but a set of discrete choral movements (much of the first one is an orchestral introduction) that build toward a powerful finale. Sample that finale, a setting of the later verses of Psalm 107 with their action-packed sea imagery. The texts of all four movements come from the same psalm, which is the key to the work: it is not meant to have dramatic forward thrust, but is a lyrical, if gigantic, reflection on that psalm. As an orchestrator, Dyson had already found his footing, and the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra under David Hill does...
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