BBC Music Magazine

Frances-hoad

Magic Lantern Tales; The Thought Machine, etc

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Edward Nieland (treble), Sophie Daneman, Natlie Raybould, Verity Wingate (soprano), Ann Huntley, Sinéad O’kelley (mezzo-soprano), Collin Shay (counterten­or), Nicky Spence (tenor), Mark Stone, Philip Smith (baritone); Beth Highamedwa­rds (vibraphone), Anna Menzies (cello), Alisdair Hogarth,

Sholto Kynoch (piano)

Champs Hill Records CHRCD146

80:24 mins

Setting poetry from Aristotle to Kate Wakeling, Cheryl Franceshoa­d’s songs are an absolute treasure-trove. Whether written for solo voice and piano, or for multiple voices and inventive instrument­ation, her spare, concentrat­ed, engaging music always offers something to intrigue the ear or touch the heart, usually both. ‘Invoke the Angels’ pays tribute to Britten’s Canticles, with specially written words by Kei Miller.

There are imaginativ­e settings of Wakeling’s texts in ‘The Thought Machine’, a snappy commentary on cyber-dating in ‘Love Bytes’ and the disc closes with a heart-shredding portrait of life with an autistic child in ‘Autistic Bedtimes’.

The album title is taken from the opening cycle on World War One poems by Ian Mcmillan, in which the composer follows a well-trodden English path, but with her own highly persuasive contempora­ry language. Tenor Nicky Spence’s singing in this cycle is outstandin­g, with diction paramount. Indeed, throughout the disc words and music are seamless equal partners, just as they should be, and the performers are splendidly attentive. Jessica Duchen

PERFORMANC­E

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