Testimonials

Testimonials

A scorching Saturday ended blissfully with 45 minutes of choral delight from this excellent choir conducted by Matthew Jelf. His fascinating programme "Songs of the Dusk" spanned seventy years of late Romantic music. Brighton16 must have been rehearsing hard all afternoon but now appeared refreshed and alert to deliver this sophisticated cocktail of German song.

Rheinberger was only fifteen when he composed his sumptuous 'Abendlied', an evening song. Clearly, he was already a prodigious organist, with an obvious love of Bach. The choir's confident and clear handling of his rich harmonic shifts and formal counterpoint was very reassuring.

Thus, when they began Brahms' intense motet 'Warum ist das Licht gegeben dem Mühseligen', a lament from the Book of Job, we knew the music was in safe hands. With the pitch, the diction and the ensemble secure, we could sit back and enjoy the conductor's interpretation.

Not long ago a work by Dame Ethel Smyth would have been an 'item of particular interest' but these days we know more than her tub-thumping 'The March of the Women'. With 'The Wreckers' playing at Glyndebourne, she sits comfortably among the greats. In fact, in this concert I preferred her 'Komm, süsser Tod' over the Brahms. Brighton16 gave it a gravitas that led easily into the dramatic highpoint of the concert, Bruckner's magnificent motet, 'Christus factus est'. Jelf pulled out all the stops. The abrupt silences and the dynamic extremes worked especially well in the church's unusual acoustic, where the double nave gave back some magical echoes.

The biggest risks and so most excitement came in 'Der Abend', a work for 16 voices by Richard Strauss of a Classical poem by Schiller. At one voice to a part, it was bound to tax the singers. Every member of the choir had a chance to shine, some with more tunes than others. The voices were distinct and no single voice stood out for long. Only someone actually following the score could tell if it was always accurate but the whole effect, at times a shimmering muddle, was glorious, comparable with the lushest moments of Strauss's operatic orchestration.

After that rare treat came Max Reger's 'Schweigen', a poem to Silence. My ears were now used to complex harmonies and unexpected modulations so I listened passively, enjoying the moment. After so much complicated music I was happily surprised by the last song, Schoenberg's 'Schein uns, du liebe Sonne'. Written between 1922-29 when he was otherwise developing his 12 tone music, this gentle folk song arrangement made a soothing finale to a splendid concert.

St Michael's Church,
9 July 2022
Rating: *****

Andrew Connal

Latest Brighton 2022

Brighton has a new a capella choir of exceptionally fine quality. They will concentrate on 20th & 21st century repertoire and they have set the bar very high with three sumptuously difficult devotional works. Herbert Howells 'Take Him, Earth, for Cherishing' is a poignant lament for the death of John F. Kennedy. The generous acoustic, like a piano's sustaining pedal, could have smudged the sound, an effect lesser choirs enjoy, but Brighton 16's tuning is so precise that Howell's complex harmonies were crystal clear. It is a choir of talented soloists, which Howell's 'Requiem' demonstrated beautifully.

Frank Martin's 'Mass for Double Choir' is famously difficult. I know the singers were all counting furiously but you couldn't tell that from their alert rapport with their inspirational conductor.

This programme is being repeated tomorrow (1 June), no doubt with as much adrenalin and obvious enjoyment for both the singers and the audience.

St Michael's Church, 31 May 2019
Rating: *****
Andrew Connal

Andrew Connal

Latest Brighton 2019

Brighton's choral community is so wonderful, both participants and audiences, as we hear and see so often in the wonderful programming of BREMF, the early music festival and of course our extraordinary community choir scene. Amongst those groups is Brighton 16, a choir that I have had the pleasure of hearing many times in recent years, this time performing in the extraordinarily beautiful St Batholomew's Church. It's a vast space, as we all know here in Brighton echoing the dimensions of Noah's Ark as related in Genesis 7, and can on occasion be rather unforgiving acoustically. But not on this occasion, in fact there was a surprising clarity to the sound and one that suited the chosen programme.

The theme for the evening was sacred and spiritual and except for two of the composers the majority were living and mainly female, a welcome redressing of the balance for sure.

The concert started with Arvo Pärt's Which Was The Son Of, a passage from the Gospel Of Luke in which the line of ascendancy from Christ to Adam and the God is recanted. Amazingly something that could easily be repetitive is transformed by Pärt's beautiful and complex scoring and shifts of tone as the list moves from vocal part to vocal part. A stunning and surprisingly moving work.

Next Canadian Ruth Watson Henderson's Make Me A World, a setting of James Weldon Johnson's poem The Creation, now titled Make Me A World, a stunning work that seemed so terribly poignant given the state of the world at this moment in time. This piece was accompanied on piano by Olly Parr, fluttering bursts, and the occasional voice of God represented by a rich baritone.

Caroline Shaw's and the swallow we are told in the excellent programme notes, was inspired by the Syrian refugee crisis using words taken from Psalm 84. This delicate setting was almost dream-like and ended with a soft percussive motif that we are told symbolises the falling of autumn rain, whether it does or not is of course irrelevant, it is just a fascinating detail.

Round me falls the night is next, Annabel Rooney's setting of the text from William Romani's hymn, a work that showed just how precise the Brighton 16 are in both pitch and timing, a precision that is not clinical but clear evidence of their exacting rehearsal process and dedication to perfection.

A real highlight of the evening for me next, Eric Whiteacre's When David Heard takes just a few words and through almost relentless repetition expresses a depth of grief that becomes totally tangible. Not for all tastes I suspect but I personally found it deeply moving.

John Taverner's settings of William Blake's The Lamb and The Tyger lifted the mood, two works perhaps in familiarity changing the tone for a moment before hearing Lili Boulanger's Hymne au soleil which given the age of the composer who died at 24, is remarkably sophisticated.

In contrast Joby Talbot's The Wishing Tree had a shrill percussive opening that stabbed into the calm of the space before settling into a more pastoral passage punctuated by soaring soprano interjections.

The programme concluded with My Guardian Angel by Judith Weir which artistic director an Matt Jelf revealed would invite we the audience to take part, a scary moment for some, including me, but after a short introduction and instruction I felt encourage to join in, albeit rather quietly. I felt sure that those around me and Mr Jelf would appreciate my sotto voce for sure. Five repetitions of a fourteen bar chant brought an evening of exquisite music to a delightful close.

Above all the evening was evidence that this choir is performing at an extraordinarily high level, stiletto sharp precision ringing clear in the magical atmosphere of St Bart's. Programming that is both challenging to them and to we the audience, and all the better for that, much as I enjoy being entertained, I equally enjoy being exposed to new work, and as I write I am listening again to the pieces that I heard last night. You can also enjoy the choir by going to their website where there are recordings to enjoy and dates for future concerts, www.brighton16.co.uk

Andrew Kay

1 March 2026

St Bartholomew's Church

Rating: *****

© 2018 Matt Jelf. All rights reserved.
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