The Times
"an overwhelming world premiere"
Read MoreMiserere (US Premiere)
Stabat Mater (US Premiere)
Sir James MacMillan, the preeminent Scottish composer of our time, draws upon his Celtic heritage and Catholic faith for revelatory choral works that tap into our universal humanity. Britten Sinfonia and The Sixteen, under the baton of Harry Christophers, present the US premiere of MacMillan’s Stabat Mater, a gripping new masterpiece evoking a mother’s anguish.
"Throughout the many wrenching contrasts there's always a focused emotional thread"
Read More"MacMillan’s Stabat Mater is a sustained exploration of sorrow that has unlocked some of his most powerfully moving and bittersweet writing"
Read More"While passages of the choral writing are undeniably beautiful, often MacMillan’s response to the text involves something spikier, perhaps onomatopoeic"
Read More"This grief-wracked Stabat Mater is no easy listen, but then MacMillan clearly did not mean it so."
Read More"Macmillan has given universal expression to the despair of a mother in mourning in a work noble and solemn for our times."
Read More"As if possessed across the centuries by the spirit of Michelangelo's colossal, vividly coloured figures, the Sixteen and Britten Sinfonia produced one of those performances during which you can hardly breathe for fear of missing a nuance of expression."
Read More"Listening to Sir James’ setting of the Stabat Mater is painful. It also transfixes, captivating the audience for an hour in a contemplative prayer."
Read More"Its stark but searing beauty is brilliantly illuminated by the powerfully nuanced voices of The Sixteen and the poetically rich accompaniment of the Britten Sinfonia, by turns cosseting and excoriating."
Read More"The Britten Sinfonia have tremendously incisive rhythmic bite – their jagged chords four minutes into the first section have almost percussive violence to them..."
Read More"It’s a devastatingly powerful evocation of Mary’s agony, balancing impassioned choral writing with equally intense, occasionally violent, work for the strings of the Britten Sinfonia."
Read More"At nearly an hour and with an accompanying score played by the Britten Sinfonia, this is a major piece and superbly performed."
Read More"It’s obvious that MacMillan’s music makes virtuoso demands on both the singers and the players but these artists meet this immense challenge head on and seem to leverage their performance off MacMillan’s music so as to give a visceral account of the work."
Read More"This is a setting which is alive to the personal drama of the text, and there are moments of real violence."
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