Description
About the Author
David Bednall is one of the leading choral composers of his generation. He has an extensive freelance playing and conducting career, and is Organist of The University of Bristol, Sub-organist at Bristol Cathedral, and conducts The University Singers. He won prizes in Improvisation and Performance at the examination for FRCO, and has improvised on live radio, and performed extensively in the UK and abroad. He appeared as stunt-organist on 'Dr Who. He is most prominent as a composer, and recordings of his works have been extremely well received. A number of his works have been broadcast on radio, and he has been commissioned by St Paul's Cathedral, and The Queen's College, Oxford. His 40-part motet Lux orta est iusto closed the Bristol Proms 2015 and December 2018 saw the premiere of Make We Merry for upper voices, brass, and organ, commissioned by Benenden and the recording of this has been released on Regent Records.
Reviews
Only a brave composer publishes a setting of these words, so memorably set by Herbert Howells, but David Bednall succeeds by being true to himself and not influenced by Howells's distinctive harmonic language. The words are set with a heightened emotion, especially at the repeated 'yea, even for the living God' that leads into a slowly and dramatically proclaimed 'When, when shall I come to appear'. This becomes quieter and more inward for 'before the presence, the presence, the presence of ...' and, on the final word 'God', D minor changes to a pianissimo D major. It is a most effective setting. * James L. Montgomery, www.rscm.com, June 2017 *
Book Information
ISBN 9780193514270
Author David Bednall
Page Count 8
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Weight(grams) 18g
Dimensions(mm) 255mm * 178mm * 1mm