Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Musicians are top of the class

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F it’s not broken, don’t fix it!

Well, I would never consider the major work from this programme, The Crucifixio­n by Stainer (1887), to be ‘broken’, and yet here we heard a revised version.

The Huddersfie­ld University Choir and organist Thomas Moore, conducted by Dr David Milsom, told the Passion story of Christ through Stainer’s original choruses and solos.

However, most of the expected hymns were replaced by wisely chosen choral numbers which served to enhance the inherent Biblical message in a performanc­e more suited to a concert hall than to a church’s congregati­onal act of worship.

Excellent choral ensemble hallmarked this piece and the choir enthralled us with powerful dramatics in Fling Wide the Gates and in their spell-binding rendition of God So Loved the World. This wonderful ‘a capella’ singing featured in two of the choral interludes and exposed a beautiful choral blend.

The main tenor and bass solos were equally shared by Sean Brines and Edmund Le Brocq and George Ford and Charles Murray respective­ly. Prepared and polished; a top team of very promising voices.

Prior to this we heard from the Huddersfie­ld University Orchestra, conducted by Robert Guy, in Beethoven’s jocular First Symphony (1800) which was successful not least because of a reliable wind section.

Almost continual dialogue between wind and strings dominated the opening movement with a surprising solid contributi­on from a modestlysi­zed yet powerful string section.

Robert’s perfect choice of tempi Event: Venue: By: allowed the ‘one-in-a-bar’ Scherzo to zip along but not run away with itself and there was plenty of space for dynamic contrasts in the fizzing Finale.

The University of Huddersfie­ld String Orchestra, directed by Niall Turner, delivered a stunning selection of music spanning 100 years in origin.

Being assessed as part of his exams, final-year student Niall was under pressure and he rose to the occasion. He showed a high level of command, particular­ly in controllin­g the tangled texture of Pärt’s Cantus in Memoriam Benjamin Britten (1977) with almost metronomic discipline as bell-tolls from a single chime added to the soundpalet­te.

Love’s bitterswee­t emotions were conveyed in Greig’s Two Elegaic Melodies (1881) by well-shaped phrasing and expressive, cantabile melodies from both upper and lower strings.

Lacking in compositio­nal structure but not invention of ideas was Tubin’s Elegy for Strings (1946) which delighted us with it folk-song-like feel underpinne­d by securely pitched coloured harmonies.

This concert proved that The Huddersfie­ld Music Department is worthy of its outstandin­g national reputation.

We must to continue to support its promising students, many of whom chose to stay and make this town their home.

See Livemusic@hud.ac.uk for future event details.

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