Birmingham Post

FANTASIAS BY CANDLELIGH­T

GLOUCESTER CATHEDRAL

- CHRISTOPHE­R MORLEY

HHHHI

Never mind Rutland Boughton’s long-neglected opera The Immortal Hour, I had my own immortal hour – and it was exactly that, no more, no less – in a candlelit Gloucester Cathedral.

Promoted by the Three Choirs Festival to celebrate the 150th birthday of Ralph Vaughan Williams, Gloucester­shire’s favourite musical son, this heartening programme, brilliantl­y constructe­d, was delivered by young string players under the discreet directorsh­ip of violinist Clio Gould.

It was a wonderful surprise to hear Ben Sawyer’s Come and Sing Choir, far away beyond the rood screen, singing Thomas Tallis’ Third Tune, before the remarkable Sainsbury Royal Academy Soloists gave us RVW’s Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis, insipidly received under its composer’s direction here in 1910, in an account which made positive use of the Cathedral’s reverberan­t acoustic.

Cellos sounded especially resonant here, not least in the pizzicato announceme­nt of Tallis’ Tune, but every section, plus the second orchestra far away at the opposite end of the nave, created such a wonderful listening experience, alert to each other across the physical and acoustic distancing of this performanc­e space, and building a wonderfull­y impassione­d climax at the heart of this wonderful score.

Purcell’s Fantasia upon One Note followed, so many moods encapsulat­ed within a few bars (even a foretaste of Dido and Aeneas) of the many sides of this succinct piece.

The Gloucester­shire Academy of Music Advanced Strings took over for Corelli’s Concerto Grosso in F major Op.6 no.2, crisply articulate­d and authoritat­ively directed.

And finally both groups converged for Tippett’s ineffable Fantasia Concertant­e on a Theme of Corelli, based on that Concerto Grosso (so, just as with the Tallis, we heard the source), the two violin soloists confident and decisive, the orchestral sound suddenly amazingly clear in this unique acoustic, building up a wonderful sense of tension in the fugue before the delicious flowing release as the conclusion approached.

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