Author Archive for Divine Art Recordings Group – Page 3

Gabriele Micheli Wins a Music & Stars Award!

The online Classical Music compeition, Music & Stars Awards has announced Gabriele Micheli’s Ciccolini Prizewinner Recital album as the 2023 Gold Star Award Winner for Best Piano Solo Album! Congratulations to Gabriele Micheli!

The Awards were selected by The International Jury of Music and Stars Awards. The International Jury of Music and Stars Awards is made of leading renowned personalities and rising stars, of outstanding reputation in their own field: soloists, chamber musicians, professors, sound technicians and video experts.

Gabriele Micheli – Divine Art Debut Series

Introducing the young prodigy, Gabriele Micheli, recipient of the esteemed Second Prize in the renowned Ciccolini Piano Competition. At just 22 years old, Gabriele’s musical journey has been nothing short of remarkable. Gabriele secured his place at the acclaimed Conservatoria Santa Cecilia in Rome aged 9, and his passion for the piano continued to flourish. Graduating with flying colours in 2017, he further honed his skills, obtaining his Master’s degree from the same prestigious institution in 2020.

Gabriele’s exceptional talent has earned him international acclaim, as he has emerged victorious in numerous global competitions, leaving audiences spellbound with his soulful performances. This album showcases his diverse repertoire, offering a splendid fusion of keyboard masterpieces from the baroque, Romantic, and 20th Century eras. His profound musical expression and technical finesse can be heard clearly in this excellent recording.

Métier Announces New Project from Euan Moseley

Following Métier’s release at the beginning of 2023 of the Complete Piano Sonatas of Geoffrey Allen (5 CDs), the label is embarking on another major piano set for a relatively little known composer of great merit, namely Euan Moseley (b. 1943). The set will, like the Allen, be performed by Murray McLachlan with recording scheduled for February 2024. The composer, well known for his dry and acerbic humour, introduces himself and his album:

Euan Moseley
Euan Moseley © E T Moseley

Euan Tyler Moseley, or “E. T.” lives near Chesterfield, Derbyshire, U.K. with his family, no chickens and no graffiti. His favourite pastime was rock climbing and watersports. After retiring from teaching, mostly geography and latterly music, he had a “proper go” in 2001 at writing some music. The result was “Piano Topography: 20 Topographs, recorded when crossing the musical surfaces of a distant land”. “P.T” is characterised by tripping melodies, urgent rhythms, pungent sonorities and exquisite tranquillity. A real treat. Each Topograph is akin to a bravura fantasy concert study. They are printed in 2 volumes. It was performed by the Hungarian virtuoso, Gusztáv Fenyö in the Conservatoire, Birmingham and in the Cadogan Hall, London, in 2006 and recorded on a double disc by Claudio Records (no longer available). It was probably the first major piano work of the 21st century and attracted critical acclaim from Vladimir Ashkenazy, John Lill C.B.E., Murray McLachlan, Kathryn Stott et al. Despite this, Moseley was not able to elicit interest from publishers or broadcasters.

Volumes followed for wind quintet, string quartet, flute (13 Escapades), clarinet (10 Impromptus, performed in October 2023, Newport, S.W. Wales), oboe, violin and songs with chamber accompaniment and Miditures for piano. During Covid restrictions, Unusuals, Waltzes & Waltzettes, River Scherzos, Rhapsodies, Toccata, Tokkatob, Prime Preludes, and Nocturnes were written.

Moseley’s music is deliberately not avant-garde (though tricky to play) and steers away from atonal music which rarely cheers up an audience.

The 89th Key: The Complete (so far) Piano Music of Euan Moseley

Label: Métier
Catalogue number: MEX 77503
Format : 5CDs ; digital download album, streaming.
Artist: Murray McLachlan (piano)

Works:

  • Piano Topography
  • Unusuals 1-6
  • Miditures 1-3
  • Toccata
  • Tokkatob
  • Prime Preludes 2-97
  • 7 Waltzes
  • 6 Waltzettes
  • River Scherzos
  • Rhapsodies
  • 4 Nocturnes
  • Chameleon

(all premiere recordings except Topographies)

Recording to take place in Carole Nash Hall, Chetham’s School of Music on 21 and 24 February 2024.
Engineer: Steve Guy

Métier Records Announces Second Album of Music by Liz Dilnot Johnson

Critics were lavish in their praise of ‘Intricate Web’ – an album of chamber music by Liz Dilnot Johnson (Métier MSV 77206, released May 2017): “An exciting album full of interesting music, musically vibrant, and ultimately satisfying.” (MusicWeb International); “Liz Johnson’s music really resonated with me. I can, therefore, do no less than give this issue my top recommendation.” (Fanfare).

Liz Dilnot Johnson
Liz Dilnot Johnson © Divine Art Recordings Group

The range of choral works on her new album spans the enormous output across the composer’s life, performed with great flair by Ex Cathedra directed by Jeffrey Skidmore. The second half of the album presents one of Johnson’s large-scale choral works, When A Child Is A Witness – Requiem for Refugees, winner of the Ivors Composer Award for community and participation (2022). Setting words from the traditional Requiem Mass, along with words from the English Prayer Book, these choral movements encompass a world of music from a simple call and response song to complex and emotionally driven music that takes the listener on an emotional journey, moving from darkness into light.

The first half of the album presents some of Johnson’s earliest works including O Vos with spirals of sopranos unfurling, defined by the Fibonacci Series, written as part of a collaboration with mathematician Prof. Ian Stewart. More recent pieces that have been commissioned and premiered by Ex Cathedra, with whom Liz is composer-in-residence, include Blake Reimagined, a lockdown work originally composed for remote choir (later released on Youtube)* with soloists including Carnatic singer Debipriya Sircar with Jazz and Soul singers Margaret Lingas and Gabriella Liandu. Four of Johnson’s carols include the playful eco-carol A Wild Midwinter Carol, the acerbic Magi (her earliest work), the eight-part advent motet Gentle Flame and the tender lullaby For This Babe. The Windhover, setting Gerard Manley Hopkins’ extraordinary poemis a tour de force, scored for baritone solo for the expressively powerful voice of Lawrence White with 10-part choir, summoning up the wild kestrel at dawn.

Award-winning British composer Liz Dilnot Johnson lives on the Malvern Hills in Herefordshire. Johnson’s richly diverse music includes danceworks, films, opera, vocal and orchestral works, delicately layered and complex chamber music and a wealth of luscious choral that is performed all over the world. Her debut album Intricate Web (2017) was met with wide critical acclaim: ‘magnificent’ (The Chronicle Review), ‘sometimes challenging, musically vibrant, and ultimately satisfying’. (MusicWebInternational).

When A Child Is A Witness – Requiem for Refugees won the Ivors Composer Award 2022 for Community and Participation involving over 100 performers including Ex Cathedra a children’s choir, professional soloists and refugee groups. ‘She has an extraordinary intuition for knowing what works’ (Jeffrey Skidmore, OBE). Johnson’s debut double album Intricate Web (2017) features the prize-winning Sky-burial performed by the Fitzwilliam String Quartet with vocalist Loré Lixenberg ‘a master-class in writing for voice and for string quartet’ (MusicWebInternational). The multiple award-winning music video Can You Hear Me? includes music from Johnson’s large-scale cantata I Stand At The Door for mezzo-soprano, baroque violin, choir and baroque orchestra with words by Greta Thunberg, Kurt Masur, the Book of Revelations, David Hart and the composer herself. 

In 2024 there will be four CD releases of Johnson’s music: the full album of selected choral works performed by Ex Cathedra – the choir with which Liz is Composer-in-Residence; The Space Between Heaven and Earth for basset horn with piano commissioned and recorded by Ronald Woodley; Inflorescence for soprano saxophone with piano commissioned and recorded by Kyle Horch; and In The Mirror – a set of pieces for cello and piano commissioned and recorded by cellist Heather Tuach. New commissions include works for the English Viol Consort, for the York Late Music Festival and a fifth major quartet for the Fitzwilliam String Quartet (supported by the Vaughan Williams Foundation).

Works (all composed by Liz Dilnot Johnson)

  • When a Child is a Witness
  • Blake Reimagined
  • The Windhover
  • For Hester
  • O Vos
  • Gentle Flame
  • For this Babe
  • Magi
  • A Wild Midwinter Carol

Artists:

  • Debipriya Sircar (vocalist)
  • Margaret Lingas (soprano)
  • Gabriella Liandu (mezzo-soprano)
  • Laurence White (baritone)
  • James Keefe (piano)
  • Rupert Jeffcoat (organ)
  • Ex Cathedra
  • Jeffrey Skidmore (director)

Recorded summer 2023, scheduled for release circa June 2024

Divine Art to release 4th album of music by Lydia Kakabadse

British born composer Lydia Kakabadse enjoys a multi-cultural heritage (Greek/Austrian mother and Georgian/Russian father) which deeply informs her musical output. Her new album, currently being recorded in London, features an even more diverse range of music than her previous albums, incorporating ethnic instruments into Western music. Making much use of the ‘alternative string quartet’ (violin viola, cello and double bass), the title track Kefi also introduces the Greek Bouzouki. While demonstrating a wide diversity of textures and styles, overall the music is coloured by use of the double harmonic scale. As well as a number of chamber works the highlight of the album is the choral work Thirty Steps commissioned by the Hellenic Institute at Royal Holloway whose choir, widely regarded as among the best mixed-voice choirs in Britain today, perform the work here. The other performers here are all experienced and very well regarded in their own fields.

The album (titled Kefi) will be scheduled for release in the early summer of 2024.

The composer

Lydia Kakabadse
Lydia Kakabadse

British born Lydia Kakabadse, a “very gifted and accessible composer” whose music is “so instantly appealing” (MusicWeb International), composes mainly choral, chamber and vocal music. Her works include string quartets, string duet, mixed ensembles, songs, musical dramas, cantata, concert Requiem Mass and sacred/secular choral works for male voices, mixed choir (SATBB) and children’s choir. Due to her multi-cultural parentage (Greek/Austrian mother and Georgian/Russian father), Lydia was brought up in the Greek Orthodox and Russian Orthodox faith and draws inspiration from Orthodox Church music – “Kakabadse’s talent at writing in the Greek Orthodox music style is supreme” (Tamvakos Archive). She has been included as a Greek heritage classical composer in the “Archive of Classical Greek Composers.” Her distinctive style has also been inspired by medieval music as well as Greek and Middle Eastern dance (which she previously taught at adult education centres). Lydia is an avid Latin enthusiast and has written original texts in Latin for her vocal works. Beginning piano lessons at the age of five, then studying the double bass during her teens under Ida Carroll OBE, Lydia went on to read music at Royal Holloway, University of London. Keen to promote the double bass in her chamber works, Lydia’s string quartets are scored for violin, viola, cello & double bass – a timbral combination which works well, with the double bass adding a great richness and abundance of colour to the quartet’s sonority. Lydia’s works have been released on CD under the Naxos and Divine Art record labels to critical acclaim: “highly recommended disc” (Music for Several Instruments); “a must-have CD” (The Chronicle). Choral commissions include I Remember commissioned by Forest Preparatory School for the Bellevue Education Northern Music Festival and the “stunning and ambitious Odyssey” (New Classics) commissioned by The Hellenic Institute of Royal Holloway, University of London to mark its 25th Anniversary (2018). Both these works feature in Lydia’s choral/vocal album, Ithaka, released by Divine Art.

Her works have been included in music festivals in the UK and abroad and excerpts from her choral album Cantica Sacra were included in a dance act on TV show “Britain’s Got Talent” in May 2020. Her popular string quartet, Russian Tableaux, has twice been broadcast on BBC Radio 3 to mark International Women’s Day. Her compositions have been performed by acclaimed chamber ensembles and choirs, including The Rossetti Ensemble, Choir of Gloucester Cathedral and collegiate Choirs of Gonville & Caius College Cambridge, Clare College Cambridge and Royal Holloway. Lydia is currently undertaking a PhD in ethnomusicology at Royal Holloway.

Album details

Title: Kefi
Label: Divine Art
Catalogue number: DDX 21129
Composer: Lydia Kakabadse
Works and performers:

  • Thirty Steps (choir with harp, flute and percussion)
    • Choir of Royal Holloway; Rupert Gough (Conductor)
    • With Cecily Beer (harp); Mary Bull (flute); Tom Wagner (percussion)
  • Kefi
  • Nomadic Dances
  • The Feast of Herod
  • Variation on a Theme of Anton Diabelli
    • Leon Bosch (double bass); Dimitris Gionis (Greek bouzouki); The Rossetti Ensemble

Recorded in London in November 2023:
Engineered and Produced by Adaq Khan and Michael Ponder

Lydia Kakabadse Recordings

Announcing a new album of choral music by James Woodhall

The spring of 2024 will see the release of a new album of choral works by British composer James Woodhall.

James Woodhall
James Woodhall © Divine Art

The recording features Cantores Lucis, a chamber choir made up of superb singers many of whom are recent graduates of the Royal Academy of Music and Guildhall School of Music, as well as a good number of more established singers.  The programme centres around Woodhall’s major work ‘The Damascus Road’ – a 30-minute, 10-section work based on Biblical texts from Acts Chapter 9. The album also contains other sacred choral works by the composer, all of which are receiving their first commercial recording.  

The soloists for The Damascus Road are Hugh Legg as Jesus and William Houghton as Saul. Hugh is an opera singer originally from Cape Town, South Africa but who has lived in the UK since 1984 and who has enjoyed a varied career in productions including the title roles in Britten’s ‘Albert Herring’ and Offenbach’s ‘Orpheus in the Underworld’. In 2012, Hugh stepped in at two days’ notice to the role of Don José in Carmen for Palace Opera. Will Houghton is a Lay Clerk at St. Albans Cathedral and has sung on broadcasts on Radio 3 and BBC 1 and on many recordings including the solo ‘Salvum fac populum tuum’ on the choir’s recent recording of Bruckner motets which was Gramophone’s ‘Editor’s Choice’. 

James Woodhall writes music in a variety of styles and genres ranging from new musicals which have been staged at the Stables Theatre, Milton Keynes and the Wycombe Swan, to music for the Cold Light Ensemble; his Jazz Trio fused with String Quartet has played at St John Smith’s Square and the legendary PizzaExpress Jazz Club in Soho. His first love, however, is choral music hence the production of this new set of sacred works which includes a joyful Jubilate Deo and a lullaby-like Ave Maria.

Album details:

Label:  Divine Art

Title: The Damascus Road and other choral works

Catalogue number:  DDX 21127

Artists: Cantores Lucis

Composer: James Woodhall

Works:

  • Jubilate Deo (Psalm 100)
  • Ave Maria
  • The Damascus Road
  • Canterbury Canticles
  • Three Psalms

The Tenor, the Actress & the Sea

Sea Song was written by Australian contemporary composer Timothy Collins and is set to a poem by New Zealander Katherine Mansfield, performed beautifully by Conceptus. Tenor, Scott Robert Shaw (the driving force behind Conceptus) arrived with a strong concept and ambition to develop a music film that would enhance the music.

Making story-led film for a classical piece which furthers the creative work already in place, is a challenge. When we began discussions with Scott (aka The English Tenor) on how to make this film for his ensemble’s recording, the first thing was to avoid the usual cheese. Nothing worse than watching a musician carry their instrument through a wafting field of wheat that has nothing to do with the music.

We ended up with our crew on the beach in Black Rock Sands, Wales. While we were warm in our coats, Actress Patricia Aragon had to brave the cold in her flowing dress. Interestingly Scott Robert Shaw managed to engineer a winter coat for his costume…

Below is our Q&A with Scott – Sea Song is released as a single for digital download or streaming and the video is on Apple Music from 8th September 2023.

Conceptus Sea Song Poster

You strike me as someone who doesn’t wait for permission. Your career has moved around Australia, Britain and Europe, you’ve surrounded yourself with fantastic musicians and also made brave creative decisions, investing heavily in your music. What drives this – have you always had a grand plan?

I wouldn’t say I had a grand plan, no – not beyond living and working as a musician in Europe.  Beyond that it was a fairly open book; I wasn’t sure if I wanted to be in opera, oratorio/early music, professional choral work, or even a mix of everything at once, which I actually did for quite awhile.  Specific plans to specialise in English music and chamber music came around in the Pandemic when opportunities were limited.  Thankfully that gave me a focus that I hadn’t had previously, and provided the first steps towards producing the album.   

You have a single, music video and solo album out all in one month, plus a launch concert in Germany. This is quite the schedule. How do you balance building a career in music with life?

It’s actually quite difficult, and more difficult than I anticipated!  The constant admin has taken me a little off guard, and I never know whether I can go away for a few days or make plans without getting an SOS email from someone who needs something fifteen minutes ago.  I’ve certainly come to appreciate that in many ways I’m running a small business rather than being a freelancer like I was before.  It’s been an interesting transition.   

You have two incarnations, The English Tenor (your solo persona) and your ensemble, Conceptus. Did you create these two as vehicles for a reason?

Yes; both are designed to platform my singing and provide performances opportunities, but I would say that Conceptus provides more opportunity for innovation.  With my solo work I focus mostly on established repertoire in a more established setting, whereas everything that Conceptus does is new and unique, with newly-commissioned works, arrangements and the film.  I enjoy both approaches equally, and appreciate the contrast.            

The Sea Song single is a beautiful piece by Timothy Collins, set to a haunting poem by Katherine Mansfield. How did this piece end up in your hands?

I have a very close professional relationship with Tim through my singing teacher who has acted as a broker and liaison for us.  To this point Tim has composed or arranged Conceptus’ entire catalogue, and he has written multiple song cycles for my solo work.  His Sea Song was the first piece we spoke about before Conceptus had been formed, and then provided the basis for the group’s genesis.          

Sea Song is also being released as a video – more of a music film than a video, which you produced. What made you want to create a film and how did you find the process?

Making a film for Sea Song was always part of our plans, from the first moment we started rehearsing and recording it.  It’s a beautiful, atmospheric piece that I think works very well on film, and we thought that it would be a good way to announce our arrival on the scene.  It took awhile to find the right person to work with though; there were two failed attempts at doing it which were frustrating.  Working with you was like a dream come true though, we were on a good wave-length from the very start and I think the results speak for themselves.    

We had a small, but excellent team on the shoot for Sea Song. Bringing in actress Patricia Aragon was clearly the right choice and she really worked hard on the shoot. What surprised me as director was how game you were to get stuck into my somewhat abstract choreography. There must be some acting and drama in your background, or does that kind of confidence come with being a performing musician?

 I have a strong theatre background and it was touch and go at one point whether I would go into singing or acting.  I trained formally at school and have done various courses and classes as an adult, most notably with the English National Opera.  There are some pretty fundamental lessons I’ve learnt that have stuck with me; don’t resist or say no to dramatic ideas when they’re given to you, and commit 100%.  I only wish I’d done more dance training!  But it was certainly fun going places I hadn’t been before in our film.      

Anecdotally, what was it like creating a film like this, from your point of view?

It was fun!  There’s a reason why making films is seen as glamorous.  I also enjoyed the opportunity to perform without singing.  Working with the team was great, too – I think we all really enjoyed it.  

What’s been the best and worst moments of your career so far?

 The best moment?  Something that has stuck with me was my first performance of the Evangelist in the Bach St Matthew Passion in Amsterdam.  The Dutch know that work backwards, and so it was a daunting task singing it there for the first time.  I wasn’t sure what response I’d get, but I got a very generous reception and the first wave of applause was a really special moment.  

The worst?  Eurgh.  You try to forget these situations!  Also in Amsterdam and around the same time I was asked to sing some operatic arias for a radio broadcast with two soprano colleagues.  I chose three arias that were safe and I knew would go well, but got a phone call the day before the concert to say that one of the sopranos was sick and would I mind performing more pieces.  I said yes, chose repertoire that wasn’t quite as secure and then over-prepared and over-sang it to get it up to standard in time.  It culminated in a horror-show of tired and bad singing where nothing went to plan.  I avoided eye-contact with everyone, slunk out the back door and hoped they forgot my name.  It was a horrible experience!        

Conceptus will have their debut album out on Divine Art Records in 2024. Is this still being recorded and what can we expect from the program?

We first began recording the album with Sea Song at the end of 2021 and have slowly added more works since then.  We have one more cycle to go, which I hope we’ll complete before the end of the year.  There is meta-physical, supernatural, at times quite dark atmosphere that connects the pieces, so I decided to call the album “Gods, Ghosts and Monsters”.  It will contain works from Timothy Collins, Peter Warlock, George Butterworth, Gustav Holst and Frank Bridge, and as before, Tim has either composed or arranged all the material for piano trio and voice.          

You’re signed up for a four album deal with Divine Art Records. Tell us what we’ve got to look forward to?

 For my next solo album I’ll be recording a song cycle by Timothy Collins set to Australian poetry, plus works for tenor, piano and viola by Vaughan Williams and Frank Bridge.  For the next Conceptus album I’ll be doing something a little different and have commissioned a Requiem by German composer Chrisoph Ritter, which I’m really looking forward to getting my teeth into.   

We’ve focussed on Sea Song, just as importantly – The English Tenor, your solo debut, is out on 8th September. It’s a fantastic who’s who of English song and a very approachable album. I believe it could create some new fans of the genre. Give us an insight into your song choices and what it means to be the English Tenor.

 Producing and recording this album has been a home-coming for me in many ways.  My first experiences as a musician were as a boy soprano in the Cathedral choir in Perth, Western Australia, and I sang works by the composers on the album every week for five and a half years.  I then went long periods in Europe where I was singing entirely different repertoire and it really has been a great thing to come back to it.  I’ve realised where my cultural and spiritual roots lie, and that first steps are often the most important ones.  It’s been very rewarding, and I’m really glad I’ve done it. 

Scott Robert Shaw has his ensemble’s single and video ‘Sea Song‘ as well as his debut solo album ‘The English Tenor‘ out on Divine Art Records from 8th September 2023.

Announcing Ekkozone!

Ekkozone logo

Divine Art Recordings Group continues its growth and breadth of repertoire with the introduction of the Ekkozone label – with the first two releases set for November:

  • “ARGUMENTA” – works by Philippe Manoury and Maurice Ravel, performed by percussionists Mathias Reumert and Anders Elten
  • “ORULA” – works for mixed ensemble by Louis Franz Aguirre

BOTH ALBUMS TO BE RELEASED NOVEMBER 17, 2023

Mathias Reumert © Christoffer Askman
Mathias Reumert © Christoffer Askman

Ekkozone was, until recently, the name of the acclaimed contemporary ensemble run by Danish percussionist/conductor Mathias Reumert. Last year, however, the company shifted status. As Mr. Reumert states:  

“In late 2022 I came to realize that Ekkozone had transitioned into something more accurately described as a production house / curating agency. Our focus had shifted from playing concerts towards curating and producing. That’s when I decided to turn Ekkozone into a record label. The partnership between Ekkozone Records and Divine Art Recordings Group makes sense from so many angles. Most importantly, perhaps, is a shared sense of responsibility to be ambassadors of musical authenticity”.

The release from Ekkozone Records, “Argumenta”— works by Philippe Manoury and Maurice Ravel, has already received high accolades in magazines such as Klassisk and Fanfare. In his liner notes for the album, Philippe Manoury reflects on his music for percussion and offers insight into his new compositions, ‘Argumenta’ and ‘Suspension-Effondrements’, which are featured here in world premiere recordings.  This album is being relaunched with full worldwide CD and digital distribution by Divine Art in November.

November also marks the release of the album “Orula”, a journey into the world of exiled Cuban composer, Louis Franz Aguirre. “This music has the power of an exorcism, brutal and impenetrable”, notes Dr. Iván César Morales Flores in a statement on the upcoming release. “His music is a strange marriage of modernism with the mysteries of the Afro-Cuban Santería religion. Extreme sonorities, irascible micro-tonal melodic designs, frantic sound blocks, complex micro-rhythmic relationships and a wide range of unconventional timbral effects, are some of the components that articulate the exuberant language of Aguirre’s work”.  This album prepares the way for the first 2024 Ekkozone release – a programme of Aguirre’s music for Percussion Sextet (Ekkozone 2)

Athene Announces Volume Four of Johann Jakob Froberger’s Harpsichord Suites

English harpsichordist Gilbert Rowland is preparing the fourth volume in his ongoing series presenting the complete Suites for Harpsichord by Johann Jakob Froberger.  The album is to be recorded at Holy Trinity Church, Weston, Hertfordshire in  July 2024, with engineer John Taylor who produced all of Gilbert’s previous Divine Art and Athene recordings. Earlier  volumes have attracted much praise:

Gilbert Rowland
Gilbert Rowland © Andrew Cockrell

“A glorious sound and enjoyable music recorded in a resonant acoustic, giving a truly luscious sound. Rowland plays with energy and a good forward drive.” —David Griffel (Harpsichord & Fortepiano) on volume. 1

“One of the finest recordings of Froberger’s harpsichord music I have heard, with a wonderful-sounding instrument and magnificent playing from Rowland.” —Stuart Sillitoe (MusicWeb International) on volume 1

“Froberger’s music is individual in nature and ground-breaking – he was one of the first composers to settle the ‘dance-movement’ style. These are thrilling and authoritative recordings by Gilbert Rowland of wonderful music.” —John Pitt (New Classics) on volume 2

“Froberger’s music – in this splendid rendition by Gilbert Rowland – reveals huge variety and baroque beauty. Clever, ingenious and melodious engaging and attractive works.” —Stuart Millson (Quarterly Review) on volume 2

“Impeccably noble performance… first-class engineering… an indispensible addition to fine recordings of early music.” – Rafael de Acha (All about the Arts)

Johann Jakob Froberger (1616-1667) was a highly accomplished composer of the middle baroque and is usually credited with inventing the ‘baroque suite’ used with variations by Bach, Handel and countless other composers; certainly it was his idea to set the ‘backbone’ of the Suite as the four dance movements of allemandecourantesarabande and gigue. He was extremely prolific and indeed several works (including Harpsichord Suites) have been discovered only recently.

Gilbert Rowland first studied the harpsichord with Millicent Silver. Whilst still a student at the Royal College of Music, he made his debut at Fenton House 1970 and first appeared at the Wigmore Hall in 1973.

His mentors have included Kenneth Gilbert and Fernando Valenti. Recitals at the Wigmore Hall and Purcell Room, appearances at major festivals in this country and abroad, together with broadcasts for Capital Radio and Radio 3 have helped to establish his reputation as one of Britain’s leading harpsichordists.

His numerous records of works by Scarlatti, Soler, Rameau and Fischer have received considerable acclaim from the national press. The recording of the 13-CD set of Soler sonatas with Naxos was completed in 2006. He also recorded a CD of Sonatas by Albero for London Independent Records, which was released in 2009. He joined Divine Art in 2010 to record the harpsichord suites by Handel, followed by those of Froberger and Mattheson.  Gilbert Rowland is assigned to Divine Art’s specialist early music label, Athene.

Froberger: Suites for Harpsichord, volume 4

Performer: Gilbert Rowland (harpsichord)

Label: ATHENE

Catalogue number: ATH 23215 (2CD set, double digital album)

Works: Harpsichord Suites by Johann Jakob Froberger 

  • Suite in G minor, FbVW 614
  • Suite in E minor, FbWV 622
  • Suite in F major, FbWV 621
  • Suite in D minor, FbWV 613
  • Suite in B flat major, FbWV Anh. IV/02
  • Suite in D minor, FbWV 639
  • Suite in G minor, FbWV 649
  • Suite in D major, FbWV 611
  • Suite in A minor, FbWV 628
  • Suite in E minor, FbWV 648
  • Suite in C minor, FbWV 644
  • Suite in F major, FbWV Anh. IV/08

Previous Divine Art group albums by Gilbert Rowland:

Coming to Divine Art: Tales of the Glens – Piano Works by Irish Composer Philip Hammond

Divine Art Records is delighted to welcome to its roster the fine pianist Anthony Capparelli, who has recorded Tales of the Glens – a collection of piano works by Irish composer Philip Hammond. The works recorded, through thematic reference, musical inspiration, and use of traditional melody, centre in focus on the Glens of Antrim, one of Ireland’s most beautiful regions. They delve into the history, people, landscape, and folklore, taking the listener on a journey to this magical place.  With his extensive oeuvre for the instrument and prominence as a composer in Ireland, Hammond’s rich colour palette and deeply pianistic writing delights the ear with a lush world of textures befitting this theme. The album contains three premiere recordings of Hammond’s solo repertoire which include works based on traditional harp melodies originally collected and transcribed by Edward Bunting (the Bunting versions are also included here).  Finally, the centrepiece of the album is an innovative multi-movement work for pianist and storyteller titled Tales from the Sea of Moyle.  A collaboration between Anthony Capparelli, Philip Hammond, and two of Ireland’s most renowned bearers of the storytelling tradition, Liz Weir MBE and Colin Urwin, this work tests the boundaries of collaboration between art forms.  Each story is set along the Antrim coast and delivered by the commanding voices of Weir and Urwin, offering the listener guidance, and sometimes warning, on their journey. 

Anthony Capparelli © Rudy Carlier
Anthony Capparelli © Rudy Carlier

Anthony Capparelli is a pianist originally from Wisconsin, USA.  He has performed as soloist and chamber musician in six countries, and has an extensive background in teaching and collaborative piano. He has a wide range of musical interests, and as a soloist currently works with modern repertoire that ties in his upbringing in folk and Irish traditional music. As a chamber musician, he has toured across the Midwestern area of the USA and also in Ireland and the UK.  Anthony has worked and performed in masterclasses with prominent ensembles such as the Elias String Quartet, Kronos Quartet, the JACK quartet, and with pianists Orion Weiss and Emanuel Ax.  In his work with vocalists, Anthony has performed in masterclass for Dietrich Henschel, Dale Duesing, Lawrence Brownlee, Eric Owens, Charlotte Margiono, Martin Wölfel, and with members of the Lorelei Ensemble.  He has a deep love for the operatic and art song repertoire and has trained for a year at the International Opera Academy (BE) in 2021/22 as a pianist-repetiteur where he worked on multiple productions.

As a soloist, Anthony has performed in six countries, and in concert with the Kenwood Symphony Orchestra, the St. Croix Valley Symphony Orchestra, and the Minnesota Orchestra. He is passionate about bringing music to audiences that have limited access to it, and has taught piano and performed recitals in small rural pubs, hospitals, senior care homes, and prisons. He holds a Doctorate of Musical Arts from the University of Iowa under the tutelage of Dr. Ksenia Nosikova and received his Postgraduate Soloist Diploma at KASK/Conservatorium (BE) studying with Daan Vandewalle.  He now lives in Gent, Belgium. 

Tales of the Glens (DDX 2115)

Composer: Philip Hammond

Artists:  Anthony Capparelli (piano); Liz Weir (reader*), Colin Urwin (reader*)

Works

  • If to a Foreign Clime you Go (Bunting and Hammond versions)
  • An Irish Lullaby (Bunting and Hammond versions)
  • Old Truagh (Bunting and Hammond versions)
  • The Little and Great Mountain (Bunting and Hammond versions)
  • The Fair Woman (Bunting and Hammond versions)
  • The Lamentation of Owen O’Neill (Bunting and Hammond versions)
  • Open The Door Softly (Bunting) / Modulation (Hammond)
  • Aoife Og (Hammond)
  • Forgotten Longing (Hammond)
  • Tales from the Sea of Moyle (Hammond) *
  • Album duration 79:47
  • Recorded in Iowa, USA 2023

Release date:  early 2024 (exact date to be confirmed)

Remembering Jim Parker

Perhaps the name of Jim Parker is not well known – but his music is loved worldwide. Composer of numerous film and theatre scores, he is best known for his television music which includes Foyle’s WarHouse of CardsMidsomer Murders and House of Elliott among many more. He has won the British Academy Award for Best TV Music on no less than four occasions. In 2017, Divine Art released Travelling Light: Music of Jim Parker which featured a number of Perker’s compositions which were not directly for TV but still have a marvelous pictorial quality. We were saddened to learn of his death on 28 July 2023.

Jim Parker (18 December 1934 – 28 July 2023)

“I committed a lapse of taste last month and I will not be surprised if I am dismissed from my honourable office,” wrote Sir John Betjeman in 1974. The letter’s recipient was Major Sir Rennie Maudslay, keeper of the privy purse. The lapse in taste was Betjeman’s Banana Blush, an album in which the poet laureate recited a dozen of his poems to a series of musical settings by the composer Jim Parker, who has died aged 88.

While the album widened the poet’s fanbase, it was the making of Parker, who would become one of the most prolific composers in television. Among the work he is best known for are the early TV dramas of Victoria Wood, the BBC’s House of Cards trilogy and 121 episodes of Midsomer Murders.

Part of the charm of his Betjeman settings was that they were deliberately dated to match the poet’s word pictures. “Choose your partners for a foxtrot. / Dance until it’s tea o’clock,” Betjeman intoned, and Parker’s wind band supplied the backing with sax-tinged tea-dance swing, jaunty brass chorales and mournful oompah tunes.…

—Obituary Excerpt from The Guardian

See The Guardian‘s obituary here.

Coming Soon from Métier: Chamber and Vocal Music by Samuel Andreyev

Samuel Andreyev’s chamber, orchestral, vocal and solo works have been performed, recorded and broadcast throughout the world.  He is now working with Métier Records, Divine Art’s new music division, for a new album of chamber and vocal works titled ‘In Glow of Like Seclusion’ – also the title track, a setting of texts by J H Prynne. 

Samuel Andreyev © Samuel Andreyev

The CD and digital album is to be released worldwide on November 10, with a double-LP vinyl version to follow in the New Year.   The music is incredibly varied, from the sparse resonance of the Sonata da Camera, the ‘cartoon music’ (as the composer puts it) of Vérifications, characterized by primary colours and strong instrumental timbres; the Sextet in Two Parts which in contrast focuses on minute timbral shadings; and of course the cantata for solo voice and ensemble which is the title track of the album.

Born in Canada, Samuel Andreyev settled in France in 2003. After completing his studies in composition, electronic music, analysis and orchestration at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique et de Danse de Paris and at IRCAM, he was awarded a 1-year residency at the Casa de Velázquez in Madrid, Spain. Upon returning from Spain, he settled in Strasbourg, on the border between France and Germany.

Nearly all of Samuel Andreyev’s works are available on CD, including three portrait CDs on Kairos Records (Vienna) and Klarthe (Paris), with two more currently in preparation (as of 2023).

With his YouTube channel and Podcast, Samuel Andreyev presents lectures on musical topics, as well as long-form interviews with prominent musicians as varied as Brian Ferneyhough, every member of Captain Beefheart’s Magic Band, Linda Catlin Smith, Hugues Dufourt, Adam Neely and countless others. He has twice been a featured guest on the Jordan Peterson Podcast, in addition to appearances on Vox, The Symbolic World, Classical Chats and many others.

Samuel Andreyev’s music has been featured in portrait concerts in Bern, Geneva, Toronto, Paris, Kyiv, Strasbourg, Montréal, Tours, and many other cities. Andreyev is a laureat of the Henri Dutilleux Prize (2012, for ‘Night Division’), and the Grand Prix Lycéen des Compositeurs (2020, for ‘Vérifications’). He is also Vice President of the music council of the Fondation Prince Pierre (Monaco).

His works are exclusively published by Edition Impronta (Mannheim).

In Glow of Like Seclusion

MEX 77119 & MEL 12402 (double audiophile vinyl)

Release dates: CD/Digital – 10 November 2023; LP – Jan/Feb 2024

Works:

  • Sonata da Camera
  • Sextet in Two Parts
  • Vérificatons
  • In Glow of Like Seclusion*

Artists:

  • Peyee Chen (Soprano) *
  • Ensemble Proton Bern
  • Luigi Gaggero (conductor)

Divine Art to release new Album of Thomas Pitfield Songs with James Gilchrist

Early 2024 will see the release of a new album of songs by Thomas Pitfield, performed by tenor James Gilchrist with pianist Nathan Williamson. 

To be recorded at the Menuhin Hall, Cobham, Surry on 4th and 5th November, for release spring 2024. All the songs are receiving their first recording. The album production is generously supported by the Pitfield Trust.

Bolton-born composer Thomas Pitfield (1903-1999), taught composition at The Royal Manchester College of Music, where his admiring pupils included John McCabe, Ronald Stevenson, John Ogdon, Peter Donohoe, John Golland and David Ellis. He was multi-talented, being also an artist, poet, furniture maker and wood carver. He wrote and published three fascinating volumes of autobiography. In addition he was a committed vegetarian and pacifist.

Pitfield was basically a miniaturist as a composer, but larger works, all recorded, include two piano concertos and concertos for recorder and for violin. His songs vary from the frivolous and the folksy to to the lyrical and dramatic, and past performers included Pears and Britten, Owen Brannigan and Honor Sheppard. A large and lavishly illustrated volume about Pitfield’s life and work, “Endless Fascination”, with contributions by his many admirers, is shortly to be published by the Manchester firm of Forsyth Brothers Ltd., who also publish the songs.

James Gilchrist c. Patrick Allen
James Gilchrist c. Patrick Allen

Tenor James Gilchrist began his working life as a doctor, turning to a full-time music career in 1996. His musical interest was fired at a young age, singing first as a chorister in the choir of New College, Oxford and later as a choral scholar at King’s College, Cambridge. His extensive concert repertoire has seen him perform in major concert halls throughout the world with renowned conductors including Sir John Eliot Gardiner, Sir Roger Norrington, Bernard Labadie, Harry Christophers, Harry Bicket, Masaaki Suzuki and Richard Hickox.

A master of English music, James has performed Britten’s Church Parables in St Petersburg, London and at the Aldeburgh Festival, Nocturne with the NHK Symphony in Tokyo and War Requiem with the San Francisco. Recent highlights have included the role of Rev. Adams in Deborah Warner’s award-winning production of Britten’s Peter Grimes at the Opéra National de Paris, the Teatro Real in Madrid and at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden. Equally at home in the baroque repertoire, Bach’s Christmas Oratorio and St John and St Matthew Passion feature prominently in James’ schedule. Indeed, he is celebrated as perhaps the finest Evangelist of his generation; as one review noted, “he hasn’t become a one man Evangelist industry by chance”.

James’ impressive discography includes recordings of Albert Herring (title role) and St John Passion with the Academy of Ancient Music, the Finzi song cycle Oh Fair To See , and critically-acclaimed recordings of Schubert’s song cycles for Orchid Classics. More recently he has released Solitudeand Songs of Travel for Chandos Records, both alongside Anna Tilbrook, and 100 Years of British Song , a three-part recording project focussing on ’The Art of British Song’ in collaboration with pianist Nathan Williamson for SOMM Recordings. His most recent release, Inn Stetter Hut, is a recording of 16th Century viol music recorded in collaboration with the Linarol Consort for Inventa Records. His previous recordings for Divine Art include a programme of songs by John Jeffreys with Anna Tilbrook (“The Far Country” DDA 25049) and vocal items by Nicholas Marshall, David Dubery and Antony Hopkins.

Nathan Williamson
Nathan Williamson © Mark Witter

Nathan Williamson is an accomplished pianist and composer; he gives solo recitals of repertoire from the Germanic Classical and Romantic tradition, as well as 20th-century and contemporary music, with a particular focus on British and American composers. Nathan has performed at many of the world’s leading venues and festivals and worked alongside numerous living composers in performances of their work.

His recordings for SOMM Recordings and Lyrita Recorded Edition, both solo and collaborative, have been widely acclaimed. Since 2016 Nathan has also been a member of the renowned new music ensemble Piano Circus.

Songs of Thomas Pitfield (Final Title Not Determined) (DDX 21119)

The Sands of Dee | By the Dee at Night | Cuckoo and Chestnut Time | Christmas Lullaby | Shadow March | September Lovers | Lingering Music 1 | Lingering Music 2 | The Wagon of Life | The Unfulfilled | Willow Song | The Carrion Crow | The Child hears Rain at Night | Faithful Johnny | Song of Compassion | So Far from my Country | Desdemona’s Song | Birds about the Morning Air | Winter Evening: Dunham Park  |Naïad | You Frail Sad Leaves | In an Old Country Church | The Crescent Boat | Four Little Songs | In the Moonlight | Skeleton Bride

International Piano Introduces Burkard Schliessmann

International Piano has published a FREE downloadable digital magazine feature focused on Burkard Schliessmann. See the full magazine on the International Piano Exact Editions website, or flip through the gallery below:

Announcing David Johnson’s 12 Preludes and Fugues for solo piano

Divine Art Records is pleased to announce the recording, to take place later this summer, of Scottish composer and musicologist David Johnson’s 12 Preludes and Fugues for solo piano, performed by Christopher Guild.  

Christopher Guild
Christopher Guild © Christopher Guild

The only son of Sir Ronald Johnson, a high-ranking civil servant and organist at St-Columba’s-by-the-Castle, and Lady Elizabeth, director of Edinburgh’s Holst Singers and organist at Rosslyn Chapel in Midlothian, David Johnson (1942-2009) was an internationally renowned scholar of Scottish music, whose PhD thesis at Cambridge formed the basis of his most regarded work, Music and Society in Lowland Scotland in the 18th Century.  His reputation rests largely on his groundbreaking work in Scottish early music, but many who knew him (among them Professor Nigel Osborne of Edinburgh University, recorderist John Turner and historian and linguist James Reid-Baxter) believe his compositional activity should have been more widely known, beyond Johnson’s own artistic and academic circles.  His oeuvre includes choral and instrumental music, but whilst having been widely performed is scantily represented on disc.  

Johnson’s 12 Preludes and Fugues are collectively one of only two significant pieces he wrote for the piano (the other being a five-minute, single movement Sonata) and were written for composer-pianist Ronald Stevenson (1928-2015).  Written in the early-mid 1990s and published in 1995, they are highly distinctive for their melding of a soundworld not far removed from that of composers of the first half of the 20th Century, such as Hindemith or Prokofiev, with quotations from Bach, allusions to the work of Hugh MacDiarmid, and their direct quotations of popular tunes such as ‘Johnny Cope’ and ‘The Animals Went Marching Two by Two’ – all expressed with a Scottish inflection.  The motivic backbone, however, is one borrowed from Aberdonian composer Shaun Dillon (1944-2018): the Scots-Gaelic word bheatha, ‘life’, which in musical terms is represented by the notes B-flat, B, E, A.  In turn, Johnson uses this to form a tone row, and uses the pitch-scheme as a plot for the keys across the 12 works in the suite.  It is difficult to think of a similar work in the emerging canon of Scottish piano music, which makes Johnson’s 12 Preludes and Fugues, like his seminal work on 18th century music, a distinguished contribution to the nation’s musical story.

Christopher Guild is slowly emerging on the international music scene for his work with British, particularly Scottish, piano music.  He recorded 10 albums for Toccata Classics, encompassing 6 CDs of Ronald Stevenson, the complete piano music of Francis George Scott, and music by Ronald Center and William Beaton Moonie.  He has also recorded the complete piano music of Bernard van Dieren for Piano Classics and featured as collaborative pianist on a violin and piano recital with Diana Galvydyte for Champs Hill Records.  This will be Chris’s first recording for Divine Art.

David Johnson: 12 Preludes and Fugues

  • Title:  David Johnson: 12 Preludes and Fugues
  • Label: Divine Art
  • Catalogue number: DDX 21124
  • Works: 12 Preludes and Fugues (by David Johnson)
  • Performer: Christopher Guild (piano)
  • To be recorded 22 August 2023
  • At The Old Granary Studio, Beccles, Suffolk
  • Release date:  early 2024, exact date to be confirmed

Tracks

1) Prelude 1 in B flat (Allegretto ritmico); 2) Fugue 1 in B flat (Allegretto con energìa); 3) Prelude 2 in B (Grave); 4) Fugue 2 in B (Allegro non troppo, leggiero); 5) Prelude 3 in E (Allegretto non troppo); 6) Fugue 3 in E (Allegro moderato); 7) Prelude 4 in A (Largo);8) Fugue 4 in A (introducing “The animals went in two by two”) (Allegro con spirito); 9) Prelude 5 in F sharp (Allegretto grazioso); 10) Fugue 5 in F sharp (Allegretto non troppo);11) Prelude 6 in G (Meditation on Hugh MacDiarmids “O Jesu parvule”: for Ronald Stevenson) (Largo); 12) Fugue 6 in G (Chorale prelude, “Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern”) (Andante moderato); 13) Prelude 7 in C (Lacrimoso, quasi improvisando);14) Fugue 7 in C (Allegro); 15) Prelude 8 in F (with apologies to the 1635 Scottish psalter) (Solenne); 16) Fugue 8 in F (Allegretto ritmico); 17) Prelude 9 in D (Allegretto, insouciant, poco rubato); 18) Fugue 9 in D (Con energìa, non troppo allegro); 19) Prelude 10 in E flat (Lento); 20) Fugue 10 in E flat (Risoluto); 21) Prelude 11 in A flat (Andante tenebroso); 22) Fugue 11 in G sharp (on “Johnnie Cope”) (Alla breve); 23) Prelude 12 in D flat (Largo misterioso); 24) Fugue 12 in C sharp (Andante moderato)

Christopher Guild is becoming increasingly well known for his work on the piano music of Scotland and the rest of the British Isles. He has performed as soloist and chamber musician at some of the most prestigious concert venues in the UK, including the Wigmore Hall, St John’s, Smith Square, the Purcell Room and the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse. Following studies at St Mary’s Music School, Edinburgh, and with Andrew Ball at the Royal College of Music, London, his career was launched with invitations to tour the UK under the auspices of the Countess of Munster Musical Trust Recital Scheme; and to perform on the South Bank in London as a Park Lane Group Young Artist. While still a student, he performed as an orchestral keyboardist with the London Philharmonic Orchestra and City of London Sinfonia. He has worked with numerous composers, among them Judith Weir, and co-founded the Edison Ensemble, a contemporary-music group based in London. After a year’s tenure as the Richard Carne Junior Fellow in Performance at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance. He lectured on Francis George Scott and Ronald Stevenson at the Musica Scotica Annual Conference in 2019, and has written articles on Scottish classical music for iScot magazine.

“Guild offers a sensitive reading of these interesting and varied works that is insightful, colourful, brimming with rhythmic vitality, and meticulously presented on this high-quality recording”

Frances Wilson, The Cross-Eyed Pianist

“I defy anyone not to be entranced by Christopher Guild’s premiere recording of Ronald Stevenson’s A Rosary of Variations on Seán Ó Riada’s Irish Folk Mass”

The Classical Reviewer

“The entire recital is played with great empathy and genuine feeling: there is no sense of condescension”

– MusicWeb International

“A colouristic tour de force, vibrantly brought to life by Guild.”

– Gramophone

“Christopher Guild is a strenuous advocate of Scottish composers and played this varied programme with an emphatic, ringing style giving the resonance of the instrument full, rich rein.”

Threeweeks Edinburgh.com (review of Edinburgh Fringe concert)

Burkard Schliessmann and his Bach Goldberg Variations nominated for THREE 2023 Opus Klassik Awards

Burkard Schliessmann and his J.S. Bach: “Goldberg” Variations, BWV 988 recording have been nominated in three categories for the 2023 Opus Klassik Awards:

  • Instrumentalist of the Year (Category 3)
  • Solo Instrumental Recording (Category 10)
  • Innovative Listening Experience (Category 22)

The OPUS KLASSIK is a top prize for classical music in Germany and is awarded by the Verein zur Förderung der Klassischen Musik e. V. The 2023 Award will be presented to 45 winners across 27 categories as selected by a specialist jury comprised of representatives from the music and media industry. The winners will be announced in October 2023 at the official awards ceremony in Berlin.

Burkard Schliessmann Opus Klassik Award 2023 Nominations

Burkard Schliessmann’s recording of the Goldberg Variations was originally released in 2007 to high acclaim on SACD. In 2022, it was fully remastered in 5.0 Dolby Atmos Audio for full release on Surround Sound/Spatial Audio Digital and as a hybrid 5-Channel SACD/CD.

“Right from the outset the Aria and Variation 1 reveal Schliessmann’s textural clarity. His finger-strength is remarkable, each line perfectly articulated. This reading [is] absolutely compelling – as is Schliessmann’s highly-informed booklet note. Superb. ” —Colin Clarke, International Piano

Divine Art Announces 2024 Release of A Questing Soul: Music for Violin and Piano by Robin Stevens

Following the release of four critically acclaimed albums in as many years, the Divine Art label’s survey of the chamber music of British composer Robin Stevens will culminate, in spring/summer 2024, with A Questing Soul, comprising Robin’s most significant works for violin and piano. The music on this album spans almost thirty years, the two most substantial pieces – both duos – being the earliest: the tumultuous, single-movement Fantasy Sonata of 1985, and the epic, four-movement Sonata Tempesta of the following year. These are both products of the composer’s late twenties, marked by soaring lyricism and invigorating, pungent harmonies.

Robin Stevens
Robin Stevens © Iain Andrews

The remaining duos on the disc cover a wide stylistic range, from the jazzy Scherzo in Blue to the freshly melodious An Interrupted Waltz; from the turbulent Say Yes To Life, which stretches tonality almost to breaking-point, to the uncompromisingly atonal, yet deeply moving, Cri de Coeur. This generous selection also contains two miniatures for unaccompanied violin, and five for solo piano: in these works, humour and quirky playfulness abound, providing a perfect foil for the passionate intensity of the ambitious duo sonatas.

The performers on this release are the wife and husband duo Christine Townsend (violin) and Stephen Robbings (piano), both graduates of the Royal Academy in London. As a duo they are regular recitalists throughout the south of England. Christine’s freelance career includes being a guest leader of the Hallé Orchestra in Manchester, and Stephen, a celebrated Chopin player, is on the staff of Winchester College. Christine will be a welcome new addition to the Divine Art company’s almost 1000-strong roster of principal artists while Stephen previously contributed virtuosic performances of contemporary music for oboe and piano with Christopher Redgate (Métier MSV 28508).

A Questing Soul: Music by Robin Stevens for Violin and Piano (DDX 21121)

  • Composer: Robin Stevens
  • Artists: Christine Townsend (violin); Stephen Robbings (piano)
  • Recorded at hallé St. Michael’s, Ancoats, Manchester, UK
    (session in July and October 2022, April 2023 and a last session on 13 December 2023)

Robin Stevens

Born in Wales in 1958, and growing up in a musical family in the south of England, Robin’s lyricism and his love of harmony may be traced to his years as a treble and (once his voice started to break) an alto singing in church choirs. Initially a first study cellist, at sixteen he performed the Elgar Cello Concerto, complete, with the Dartington College Orchestra. At eighteen he began the Joint Course at the Royal Northern College of Music (which he didn’t particularly enjoy) and Manchester University (which he did), graduating with honours in 1980. A year later, whilst completing an MA at Birmingham University, Robin wrote a String Quintet, his first major composition. Then followed five years working on the staff of a church in York as Music Director and Pastoral Worker, where he wrote a good deal of sacred vocal music, after which Robin taught for three years, heading up the Music Department of a Senior School in West Yorkshire. His fortunes took a serious dip in 1990 when he contracted ME, a debilitating illness from which he only recovered in 2007, after which, whilst continuing to compose, he earned his living as a personal tutor, mainly teaching nine- and ten-year-old children.

A committed Christian, Robin continues to be involved in church music, as cellist, keyboard player, vocalist and composer/arranger. In 2018 Robin was the grateful beneficiary of a considerable family legacy which has enabled him to embark on the project of recording all his major compositions with some of the foremost musicians in Britain. His works include a Te Deum for choir, soloists and orchestra; Mourning into Dancing for symphony orchestra; Brass Odyssey for brass band and six percussionists; concertos for bassoon, for cello, and for viola; two string quartets; a Sonata for Solo Cello; and Fantasy Sonata and Sonata Tempesta for violin and piano. Unsurprisingly, Robin has also written a large quantity of cello miniatures, including a meditative online collection entitled An Inward Journey, which he performs himself. Robin has also recorded two albums of songs, Fire and Inspire, and Whispers in the Wasteland.

Beyond his musical activities, Robin is a regular at parkrun in Wythenshawe, Manchester; tries to cycle rather than drive; is a voracious reader, especially of thrillers and biographies; preaches every couple of months at St. Mary’s Church, Sale; loves giving dinner-parties; and, despite his best efforts, remains Christendom’s most reluctant bachelor.

Robin Stevens Recordings on Divine Art

Divine Art announces a special new multi-channel recording from Burkard Schliessmann: “Live and Encores”

Burkard Schliessmann's FAZIOLI F278-3482
FAZIOLI F278-3482 © Burkard Schliessmann

German pianist Burkard Schliessmann has been receiving glowing accolades everywhere for his concert performances and recordings, for his virtuosity and also for his individual and highly-considered interpretation of the great music from the late Baroque and Romantic eras particularly. Following five previous albums all of which have been exceptionally well received, and a recording of Fantasies by Robert Schumann (being recorded in Berlin in June), he has just completed a new recording called ‘Live and Encores’ which offers the opportunity to present different interpretations in single take recordings of a wide range of repertoire. The double Album displays a variety of stylistic elements from Bach to Mendelssohn (whose early Romantic work was highly influenced by Bach) through the High Romanticism of Schumann to Chopin, whose single waltz here represents the pinnacle of Romantic pianism.

As well as exceptional performances we can expect phenomenal sound.  The recording was made on 3-5 April 2023 at the Fazioli Concert Hall in Sacile, Italy in 5-channel Dolby Atmos high-definition audio and will be offered in a range of digital formats as well as hybrid multichannel SACD.  The instrument used is a Fazioli F278 which Schliessmann has purchased. The recording was made ‘live’ in front of a specially invited audience and thanks to the amazing support of the Fazioli family will also be presented in concert in Venice in the near future.

Burkard Schliessmann
Burkard Schliessmann © Holger Peters

Burkard Schliessmann is an official Steinway Artist and is regarded as one of the most influential pianists of the modern era. He has received numerous prizes and awards of

merits for his piano interpretations, as well as being an esteemed teacher, with classes all over the world, principally in the USA.  He is also a professional scuba diver and an Ambassador for “Protecting our Ocean Planet” – a program of Project AWARE Foundation.

Burkard Schliessmann: “Live and Encores“ (DDC 25755)

  • Format (physical): Hybrid 5-channel SACD/Stereo CD (2 discs)
  • Format (digital): Dolby Atmos surround sound;  Apple Digital Master; HD, SD and MP3 options
  • Artist: Burkard Schliessmann (Fazioli F278)
  • Producer/tonmeister: Matteo Costa
  • Piano technician: Job Wijnands (Fazioli)

Burkard Schliessmann on Divine Art

Divine Art Announces Sixth Album from Swedish Impressionist Composer Jonathan Östlund

Jonathan Östlund
Jonathan Östlund © Jonathan Östlund/Divine Art

Following four previously released and highly praised albums for Jonathan Östlund, and the fifth, “Elysian” appearing on July 14 this year, Divine Art is now preparing his sixth, to be titled ‘Rêverie’. This album, unlike the previous ones, is more focussed in terms of genre, featuring only chamber works, but all demonstrating the composer’s highly developed gift for Impressionist sound-painting.  Acclaimed for his imaginative and accessible music, he has been championed by some of Europe’s best musicians. Among the plaudits for his previous albums, he was described as ‘the 21st Century’s Debussy’ (Jan Hocek, His Voice); “this is music of filigree beauty” (Colin Clarke, Fanfare). The new album, which is to be recorded in late June, will be no less magical and will be scheduled for release in the winter, between November and February.

Rêverie (DDX 21120)

Works

  • Rêveries
  • Empyrean Nocturne
  • Fantaisie Chatoyant sur deux ‘Clair de Lune’
  • Fantaisie sur un cantique Français
  • Sognando l’al di là
  • Waiting for Pierrot
  • Winds’ Wander and Vigil (suite in 9 movements)
  • Zaubernacht

Artists

  • Myriam Hidber-Dickinson (flute)
  • Lisa Brakhman (violin)
  • [to be confirmed] (viola)
  • Mariona Tuset (cello)
  • Evgeny Brakhman (piano)
  • Eva Simó (piano)

Jonathan Östlund received his BA and MA in Composition at LTU, in Sweden, and has so far completed more than 150 works, including several orchestral works, and two concertos for violin.

His achievements include CD-releases, publications and performances with the London Schubert Players in the U.K., France and Romania throughout 2010 and 2011, as part of the ‘Invitation to Composers’ project. In 2012 he won the Public Choice Award for his Cello Sonata, premiered by A. Zagorinsky and E. Steen-Nokleberg, and was awarded 1st Prize in the Leicester Symphony Orchestra’s Composers’ Composition for his ‘Celebration Fanfare’, which was premiered during the Orchestra’s 90th Season Gala. Various premieres followed in 2013, in the U.K. and France.

The year 2014 brought Jonathan’s music to the Cadogan Hall stage with ‘Lumières’, a programme presenting ten of his chamber works, in various constellations, performed by E. Pameijer, B. Waldmann and the Cellini Quartet. That same year, his Cello Sonata received a Russian premiere, and he was a Winner in the 2015 IBLA Grand Prize, with one of his orchestral works [the extended version of which became ‘Nocturnia’, and is featured on his third album, ‘Mistral’].

His first double CD, ‘Lunaris’, was released in 2016 to critical acclaim, a year in which further premieres took place in the U.K. and in Switzerland. In 2017 Östlund’s Piano Concertino was premiered in Athens, Greece, and Y. Revich together with M. Esnult premiered a violin and piano piece in Vienna, Austria.

His second double CD, ‘Voyages’, was released in 2019, featuring (among others) Walter Gatti, Evgeny Brakhman, Sasha Grynyuk, and Alicja Smietana. His third album release, ‘Mistral’, released in 2020, includes the recording of his Concerto No. 1 for Violin & Symphony Orchestra among other mesmerising works in varied instrumentation, and was followed by the release of his fourth album, ‘Imago’, a tour-de-force double album, in February 2022 and a further superb double album, ‘Elysian’ to be released in July 2023.

Jonathan Östlund on Divine Art

Announcing 24 Preludes and Fugues by Matt Dibble

London-based composer Matt Dibble completed his 24 Preludes and Fugues for solo piano in 2021, just weeks before his untimely and tragic death due to complications following the Astra Zeneca Covid-19 vaccination. A much loved and admired musician working in many genres, Matt continues to be sorely missed by many on the classical, jazz and pop scenes. The Preludes and Fugues show his extraordinary flair for invention in many different styles, from neo-Baroque to jazz and pop, via modernism. The set represents a deeply personal undertaking, written over six years, and known only to his family and a handful of close friends and colleagues.

Matt’s dream performer for such a wide-ranging work was the internationally renowned pianist Freddy Kempf, and he would have been thrilled to know that Kempf gladly took the project on. With Paul Baily producing, Kempf recorded the project in the summer of 2022 at the Sir Jack Lyons Concert Hall, York. Although he never met the composer, Kempf said, “It really feels like some of the values that Matt paid most attention to match my own”. And his interpretation does indeed display a profound and moving understanding of the work. 

Later this year, one of the pieces will be included on the repertoire list for Trinity College London piano exams, bringing this deeply personal music to pianists all over the world. Divine Art Records are honoured to present this fine work which sadly also is issued in remembrance of this multitalented musician.

Freddy Kempf

Freddy Kempf

Freddy Kempf is one of today’s most successful pianists, performing to sell-out audiences all over the world. Exceptionally gifted with an unusually broad repertoire, Freddy has built a unique reputation as an explosive and physical performer who is not afraid to take risks as well as being a serious, sensitive and profoundly musical artist.

Freddy has collaborated with conductors such as Järvi, Dutoit, Chailly, Ashkenazy, Petrenko, Oramo, Davis and Bĕlohlávek, working with some of the world’s most prestigious musical institutions including the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, London Philharmonic, Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra, Bergen Philharmonic, San Francisco Symphony, Philadelphia Orchestra, St. Petersburg Philharmonic, Moscow State Symphony Orchestra, and the Dresden Philharmonic.

A prolific recording artist, his Tchaikovsky recital CD released in 2015 received great acclaim. In 2013, his Schumann recital disc was warmly received by the critics and, in 2010, his recording of Prokofiev’s Piano Concertos Nos. 2 & 3 with the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra and Andrew Litton was nominated for the prestigious Gramophone Concerto Award, that magazine describing the collaborative duo as “a masterful Prokofievian pair”. This was followed by a recording of Gershwin’s works for piano and orchestra, released in 2012 and described in the press as “beautiful, stylish, light, and elegant… magnificent”. 

Composer Matt Dibble

Matt Dibble © James Heatlie
Matt Dibble © James Heatlie

Matt Dibble was born and lived in Southeast London. He was a songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, vocalist, arranger, and producer, who worked across a wide range of genres and styles. As a classical composer, he wrote choral and chamber music, as well as various instrumental pieces, but these Preludes and Fugues–six years in the making—meant the most to him. He completed them shortly before his sudden and tragic death, in 2021, due to a fatal reaction to the AstraZeneca vaccine. He was 40 years old. 

Matt formed part of a highly-successful jazz trio with Terence Collie and Nick Lenner-Webster. He also played clarinet, sax, piano and sang in the punk-jazz band, Dollyman, and performed with the well-known Beach Boys tribute band, Smile. In addition to this, he played clarinet on the Dibble Zambelli albums, with Italian guitarist Fabio Zambelli, and frequently joined other groups including The Matzoh Boys, Night and Day Collective, and the Lewis Barfoot band.

In pop music he released six solo albums of original material, including ‘Bedroom Pop’, due for release this year. He was co-founder of the band Super dB, whose 2020 release ‘Écoute Ça’ achieved success in the UK, Europe and further afield. The single ‘Kool Funk’ was #2 on the UK soul chart in June July 2020 and had radio play on the BBC and internationally.

Matt studied music at the University of York, where he was mentored by Alan Hacker. He went on to study jazz at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, also studying privately with Tony Coe.

Divine Art Announces Two Groundbreaking Woodwind Recordings

Announcing Chromosphere: Symphonic Colours of the Woodwind Orchestra and Twisted Skyscape both featuring the Czech Philharmonic Wind Ensemble conducted by Shea Lolin with producer Christopher Hussey.

Chromosphere (DDX 21117)

Divine Art is honoured to present five world premiere recordings of new music performed by the Czech Philharmonic Wind Ensemble conducted by Shea Lolin featuring the world-class instrumental playing of the principal woodwind players of the Czech Philharmonic and recorded in the glorious acoustic of the Dvořák Hall at the Rudolfinum in Prague. 

Following the success of their groundbreaking 2015 album, Twisted Skyscape (to be re-issued by Divine Art in 2023, DDX 21118), conductor Shea Lolin and composer/producer Christopher Hussey have returned to Prague to record with the Czech Philharmonic Wind Ensemble, carefully curating an album of premiere recordings spotlighting the woodwind orchestra, capturing its kaleidoscopic colours and symphonic potential in order to deepen and broaden appreciation of the medium’s power.

A large chamber ensemble of flutes, oboes, clarinets, bassoons and saxophones in various sizes, the woodwind orchestra has a highly adaptable and magical tonal palette—it can be, in turn, boldly vibrant and delicately beautiful, thrillingly powerful and hauntingly tender, earnestly solemn and joyously comical. 

The recorded repertoire reflects a spectrum of musical styles that exist in 21st-century concert music, ranging from the familiar and instantly singable to the more avant-garde, but always possessing an accessible and inviting musical narrative. Chromosphere is a landmark album, comprising exciting new and re-imagined pieces by leading composers in the genre and demonstrating the unique soundworld of the woodwind orchestra.

Works

  • Keiron Anderson Alice in Wonderland
  • Judith Bingham Mozart’s Pets
  • Charlotte Harding Bright Lights
  • Kamran Ince Domes
  • Christopher Hussey Child of the Wandering Sea

Twisted Skyscape (DDX 21118)

 This groundbreaking album was the first of its kind devoted entirely to new music written for the woodwind orchestra.  It features outstanding performances by the principal woodwind players of the Czech Philharmonic, conducted by Shea Lolin, and includes four world premiere recordings.  

  • Philip Sparke Overture for Woodwinds
  • Gary Carpenter Pantomime
  • Christopher Hussey Dreamtide
  • Adam Gorb Battle Symphony
  • Christopher Hussey Twisted Skyscape

“A fantastic way to delve into the colourful world of the woodwind orchestra, with music which is varied but always approachable”

—Classical Music Magazine

SHEA LOLIN conductor

Shea Lolin
Shea Lolin

Shea Lolin studied a classical music degree in the early noughties and has worked in almost every area of the classical music industry from performing and conducting to managing several organisations and companies. With wind music taking centre stage, highlights over the last twenty years include working with the regeneration of east London in the run up to the 2012 Olympic Games, setting up and running several orchestras and recording with the Czech Philharmonic, Janáček Philharmonic and the London Woodwind Orchestra. Shea has worked with several cross-discipline musicians for hundreds of projects big and small whilst commissioning some of the best contemporary composers to write new works for various combinations of instruments.

Being a resourceful freelancer, Shea had always incorporated audio and visual materials for the music industry. This began to grow in recent years fuelled by social changes culminating in a surge in demand as the global pandemic took hold. Very recently he has undertaken aerial imaging work in Chernobyl, a production with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic along with the British composer Dr Martin Ellerby, produced an album of wind orchestra music with the Pro Arte Wind Symphony with Keiron Anderson, and several live and recorded projects with Paul Bambrough and the Purcell School. Some of this work has opened the door to larger commercial projects.  His website is at shealolin.co.uk