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Buxtehude: Membra Jesu Nostri (Choir of Magdalen College, Oxford)

Buxtehude: Membra Jesu Nostri (Choir of Magdalen College, Oxford)

John Mark Ainsley (Tenor); Robin Blaze (Counter-tenor); Giles Underwood (Bass);

"Membra Jesu Nostri is a cycle of seven cantatas, each contemplating a part of Jesus on the cross: feet, knees, hands, side, breast, heart and face. John Mark Ainsley, Robin Blaze and Giles Underwood owe their careers to the time they spent in this choir and return to sing with an intensity suitable to the intimately sensuous nature of the work, ably supported by the choir and its particularly fine trebles. String playing is outstanding throughout, with the viol consort Phantasm deliciously taut and sinewy in the lovely sixth cantata, Upon the Heart." (The Observer ★★★★★)

On Christmas Night (Choir of Magdalen College, Oxford)

On Christmas Night (Choir of Magdalen College, Oxford)

Roderick Williams (Barritone); Daniel Hyde (Director);

Sing, Precious Music (The Choir of Magdalen College, Oxford)

Sing, Precious Music (The Choir of Magdalen College, Oxford)

The Choir of Magdalen College, Oxford (Choir); Mark Williams (Conductor);

Tavener: Choral Ikons (BBC Worldwide)

Tavener: Choral Ikons (BBC Worldwide)

"The power of the performances is overwhelming and the credit goes to James Whitbourn and his vocal ensemble The Choir." (The Organ)

The Pillar of the Cloud - Five Centuries of Oxford Anthems (Choir of Magdalen College, Oxf

The Pillar of the Cloud - Five Centuries of Oxford Anthems (Choir of Magdalen College, Oxf

The Choir of Magdalen College, Oxford (); Mark Williams ();

"Appointed music director at Magdalen College, Oxford, in 2017, Mark Williams is only now making his first statement with the choir on disc. ‘The Pillar of the Cloud’ is a mixed recital that pays tribute to Oxford’s many composers, whether graduates – Weelkes and Tomkins or, more recently, William Walton and Lennox Berkeley – or those with longer professional associations such as William Harris, Leighton, Parry and Rubbra. There’s some wonderfully, unfairly unfashionable repertoire here. What a joy to find Basil Harwood, Rubbra and Magdalen’s own Bernard Rose here alongside more core Oxbridge choral fare. Magdalen’s sound has always had an unmannered, forthright quality to it, something Williams celebrates in the jagged, ecstatic dance of Leighton’s Let all the world and the surging unison swell of the Harwood. The trebles’ naturally bright tone illuminates Berkeley’s O that I once past changing were but is turned deftly down to achieve the softer blend of Parry’s Crossing the Bar and Sheppard’s setting of the Lord’s Prayer. The extended opener Lead, kindly light is nicely paced and calibrated for drama, with an outstanding solo from tenor Maximilian Lawrie, while Rubbra’s There is a spirit puts the fine treble Thomas Pennington-Arnold in the spotlight. There’s real generosity, directness and energy from these singers, but that can just sometimes work against them. Walton’s A Litany lacks, for me, that spare edginess that can bring out both its extraordinary harmonies and the text’s fragile exhortation (though the basses give a wonderful anchor), while the Rubbra feels just a little too earthy, lacking that cloudy impermanence, that sense of the ‘spirit’ that animates the verse. The tradition may be a long one but Williams, who recorded this at the end of his first year in post, is still just at the beginning with Magdalen. It will be interesting to see where he takes the choir and its sound over the next few years." (Gramophone)