Search - The Choir of Royal Holloway, Alexander Norman :: Dubra: Hail, Queen of Heaven-Choral Music

Dubra: Hail, Queen of Heaven-Choral Music
The Choir of Royal Holloway, Alexander Norman
Dubra: Hail, Queen of Heaven-Choral Music
Genre: Classical
 
Rihards Dubra, born in Riga in 1964, spent his early years under a Soviet regime for which any public performances of sacred music constituted religious propaganda and were not permissable. During his studies with Adolfs S...  more »

     
?

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: The Choir of Royal Holloway, Alexander Norman
Title: Dubra: Hail, Queen of Heaven-Choral Music
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Hyperion
Original Release Date: 1/1/2009
Re-Release Date: 11/10/2009
Album Type: Import
Genre: Classical
Style: Opera & Classical Vocal
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 034571177991, 034571177991

Synopsis

Product Description
Rihards Dubra, born in Riga in 1964, spent his early years under a Soviet regime for which any public performances of sacred music constituted religious propaganda and were not permissable. During his studies with Adolfs Skulte at the Latvian State Conservatory, Dubra began to test the boundaries of political acceptance in the last remaining years of Soviet rule. He has now emerged from the largely secular tradition of choral music-making in Lativa as a distinctive voice, that of a composer devoting himself exclusively to the composition of sacred music. The purity of this endeavor is one that Dubra has admired in the work of so-called 'holy minimalists' such as Arvo Part and John Tavener. Dubra prefers to describe his own music as a 'style of meditation' -- one instilled with the essence of the Middle Ages 'through the view of a man who lives in the twentieth century.' This recording represents a selection of pieces, from early experimentation to fully formed style -- a style that fuses minimalism and neo-romantic melodies with the inflections and philosophy of Gregorian, Medieval and Renaissance music. The Choir of Royal Holloway is directed by Rupert Gough in this their debut recording for Hyperion.