Durham Singers: Spem in Alium
Durham Singers
Tallis: Savator Mundi I
Howells: Requiem
Vaughan Williams: Silence and Music
Tallis: Sancte Deus
Vaughan Williams: Rest
Tallis: Loquebantur
Vaughan Williams: Valiant for Truth
Tallis: Spem in Alium
Conducted by Francesca Massey and Julian Wright
What do you programme alongside one of the greatest pieces of choral music ever written? Our concert builds up to the forty-part motet Spem in Alium with other pieces by Tallis that illustrate his mastery of harmony and counterpoint: the mysterious Sancte Deus is a microcosm of the dark and fearful world of early Tudor politics, and in the Pentecost motet Loquebantur variis linguis, the miracle of the Apostles speaking in tongues tumbles out through seven elaborate vocal lines.
We’ve also chosen music by Howells and Vaughan Williams. Both composers wrote famous pieces that works were explicitly in homage to Tallis, and in their unaccompanied vocal music, we hear how they found the modal harmonies of the Tudor era liberating and inspiring, Our Assistant Musical Director Francesca Massey directs us in Howells’s Requiem, an intensely personal work in which Howells interleaves traditional Latin Requiem texts with psalm settings in English that express a hope in the eternal rest and comfort of heaven, a theme that threads its way through much of the music for this programme and which returns in Vaughan Williams’s partsong “Rest” and “Valiant-for-Truth”.
This is music by composers whose lives took them into different musical and spiritual moods but who speak clearly across the centuries, shedding colour and light on one another, and culminating in a musical tapestry as extraordinary as any Renaissance stained-glass window.
Tickets £15, students and under 25 £10, children 13 and under free