Product Details
Lauridsen: Lux Aeterna, etc. / Salamunovich, Los Angeles Master Chorale

Lauridsen: Lux Aeterna, etc. / Salamunovich, Los Angeles Master Chorale
M. Lauridsen

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Track Listing

  1. Introitus - Lux Aeterna
  2. In Te, Domine, Speravi - Lux Aeterna
  3. O Nata Lux - Lux Aeterna
  4. Veni, Sancte Spiritus - Lux Aeterna
  5. Agnus Dei - Lus Aeterna - Lux Aeterna
  6. En Une Seule Fleur - Les Chansons Des Roses
  7. Contre Qui, Rose - Les Chansons Des Roses
  8. De Ton Reve Trop Plein - Les Chansons Des Roses
  9. La Rose Complete - Les Chansons Des Roses
  10. Dirait - On - Les Chansons Des Roses
  11. Ave Maria - Ave Maria
  12. MID WINTER SONGS: Lament For Pasiphae - M. LAURIDSEN
  13. MID WINTER SONGS: Like Snow - M. LAURIDSEN
  14. MID WINTER SONGS: She Tells Her Love While Half Asleep - M. LAURIDSEN
  15. MID WINTER SONGS: Mid-Winter Waking - M. LAURIDSEN
  16. MID WINTER SONGS: Intercession In Late October - M. LAURIDSEN
  17. O Magnum Mysterium - O Magnum Mysterium

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2841 in Music
  • Released on: 1998-05-19
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .21 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Modern choral music for amateur singers may be America's biggest musical underground. That's the only explanation of why Grammy-nominated composer Morten Lauridsen can claim that his works are some of the most often-performed new pieces in years, although few among the East Coast intelligentsia have ever heard of him. Like the similarly popular John Rutter, Lauridsen inhabits an extremely conservative style directed simply and single-mindedly at showing off the beauty of choral singing while it illustrates inspiring texts. Unlike many of his fellow neo-Romantic conservatives, Lauridsen displays a brand of conservatism that is completely convincing and sincere. His music also has range, from the spellbindingly rapturous Lux aeterna to his playful settings of Rilke's poems about the beauty and thorniness of roses in Les chansons des roses. There is, moreover, a Coplandesque streak heard in his Mid-Winter Songs, which are settings of poems by Robert Graves. Though the Los Angeles Master Chorale has a suitably red-blooded sound, the music would be better served with more precise diction. --David Patrick Stearns

New York Times, January 30, 2000
Lauridsen enjoys respect of music directors throughout America. Beauty, potency...grand/intimate works. Perpetual light shines on all the settings.

Los Angeles Times, December 20, 1998
Masterly works, both esoteric and accessible, simultaneously popular and deep, sung with passionate intensity. Give it to your best friend.


Customer Reviews

A true masterpiece5
Being a choral singer myself, and having heard Paul Salamunovich's choirs in person, I was certainly anxious to hear this recording. Having now owned it for nearly a year, I don't think I've EVER played a CD more times than this one--a one-of-a-kind disc and an absolute must-have for all choral music aficionados.

Under Paul's direction, the Chorale's spirited ensemble singing transforms Lauridsen's compositions into sound paintings of transcendent beauty--truly a match made in heaven!

With this recording, the Los Angeles Master Chorale has unquestionably arrived at the pinnacle of contemporary choral performance. Thank you, Morten, Paul and LAMC--we anticipate an encore!

Exquisite!5
This anthology of choral works by Morten Lauridsen, an American composer bearing more than a superficial similarity to such Baltic composers as Arvo Pärt, Henryk Górecki and Einojuhani Rautavaara (and why should he not, with the name Lauridsen so suggestive of Baltic roots?), as well as Johannes Brahms, is a comforting spiritual journey into the magical world of choral music. As far as I know, with one notable exception, all of these works receive their recording premieres on this well-filled album. The sole exception is Lauridsen's "O Magnum Mysterium" (Oh, Great Mystery), which is also included on Robert Shaw's final, posthumous, release by the same name on the Telarc label.

This release might well have gone unnoticed by me had it not been brought to my attention by a cyberfriend at the New York Times Classical Music Forum, who, knowing my affection for Shaw and his work, thought that I would like it. How right he was!

It is more than fitting that the names Lauridsen and Shaw be juxtaposed with respect to this album. The performers are the Los Angeles Master Chorale, the successor to the Roger Wagner Chorale, the one and only choral group which, over its lifetime, was able to serve any notice that Shaw had competition in this field (although Shaw continued to remain paramount, regardless). And the music Lauridsen has provided for this release, of course including "O Magnum Mysterium," is of the type and of a quality that Shaw very much made his own in his late-career work with the Robert Shaw Festival Singers and Chamber Singers.

But the credit should go, not to Shaw, but clearly to Lauridsen and to Paul Salamunovich, the current music director of the Los Angeles Master Chorale, for this selection and outstanding performance of Lauridsen's works. Basically conservative in their compositional make-up, these works fall easily on the ears, and suffuse the listener with a feeling of immense grace and warmth, much as Brahms' "Ein Deutsches Requiem" (referenced in the liner notes as a measure of what Lauridsen sought to accomplish) does.

The clear highlight of the album is the title work, "Lux Aeterna." Spiritual, cosmic, romantic and moving beyond measure are adjectives which fall readily to hand when describing its effect. By itself, it is reason enough to acquire this album, and it is the work which most obviously pays tribute to Brahms. But "Les Chansons Des Roses" and "Mid-Winter Songs," while different in their styles and impact, are equally accessible and well-done. As for "O Magnum Mysterium," I find the choice between Salamunovich and the Los Angeles Master Chorale on the one hand and Robert Shaw and his Chamber Singers on the other to be a toss-up. Given my high personal regard for the life and work of Shaw, this is just about the highest praise I could heap on Maestro Salamunovich and his singers.

Five easy stars for this anthology of a composer who now has an outstanding cross-section of his choral works for us to hear, and to a choral group that performs as well as any, including Shaw's groups, on this release.

Bob Zeidler

Transports one to sublime realms of musical light5
I am a mere ordinary listener. I have no special skills nor training with which to judge this musical offering. I only know that once I was blind, but now I see. Lauridsen's music was performed so beautifully and sensitively on this CD that it took my breath away. What a masterpiece of compostion! It made me think of the painter Turner painting, well, light. My favorite composition on this recording is Lux Aeterna, the title piece. It is transportingly beautiful, and does with music what the poet Dante did with words: takes one to the sublime realms of light, to the habitation of--dare I say it--God. A profoundly moving experience. I owe all my good words to Mr Lauridsen for composing such a work and to Mr Salamunovich and the Los Angeles Master Chorale for their glorious singing of it! Bravo and Hallelujah!