BBC Music Magazine

Thea Musgrave

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The Voices of Our Ancestors; Missa Brevis; Rorate Coeli

The New York Virtuoso Singers/ Harold Rosenbaum

Lyrita SRCD 387 63:44 mins

The cover image from the British Museum’s famous Assyrian Lion Hunt reliefs may suggest

Thea Musgrave’s vocal ancestors can be traced back to the seventh century BC. Obviously that’s not the case, though her lifeline and musical heritage, if shorter, are still interestin­g: a Scottish childhood; four Paris years studying with Nadia Boulanger; 20 years composing in Britain; 45 years, so far, composing in America. Whatever the genre tackled, or country or decade, her music has often carried a theatrical streak, most noticeable here in

The Voices of Our Ancestors itself, a 35-minute work from 2014 scored for perambulat­ing choir, a brass quartet and a church organ. The ancient texts it sets pose existentia­l questions, but the answers rarely cohere in a satisfying way in this live recording from the resonant spaces of a New York church.

With the 2017 Missa Brevis, written for Wells Cathedral, the composer’s imaginatio­n appears boxed in by the liturgical format, the expectatio­ns of the British choral tradition and a fairly redundant organ part. Luckily, we have as counterwei­ght the exultant, dramatic Rorate Coeli from 1973, packed with illustrati­ve details and layered textures sparked into life by the vigorous words of the 14th/15th century Scottish poet William Dunbar. This is by far the best showcase for Harold Rosenbaum’s bold and fearless New York

Virtuoso Singers, singing lustily and unaccompan­ied, but elsewhere too often locked in a cage. Geoff Brown

PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★

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