The Portsmouth Baroque Choir sends seasonal messages

Tropical beach

Music for Advent and Christmas, Havant URC, 7pm on Saturday 7 December

Join Portsmouth Baroque Choir for Music for Advent and Christmas at Havant URC on Saturday 7 December at 7 pm. Experience beautiful choral pieces spanning 430 years, from Byrd’s Laetantur Coeli to John Merrick’s modern The Bee Carol. Highlights include Mendelssohn’s uplifting How Lovely Are the Messengers, Kodály’s O Come, O Come, Emmanuel, and Holst’s Long Ago, Prophets Knew. With mulled wine, mince pies, and carols for all to sing along, this concert will bring warmth and festive joy. Don’t miss this celebration of Advent’s peace and hope!

How lovely are the messengers that preach us the gospel of peace. To all the nations is gone forth the sound of their words… are transcendental lines from Epistle to the Romans that hold the key to Portsmouth Baroque Choir’s Music for Advent and Christmas, combining messages about the Second Coming, peace and celebration. 

Those “messengers” were Paul and Barnabas who travelled together around the Eastern Mediterranean and Anatolia in ca. 46-49 CE, evangelising and making converts. Mendelssohn included that text in the second part of his oratorio St Paul (1836) since when How lovely are the messengers has become well-known and loved by church choirs as a standalone anthem.

The Mendelssohn sits about halfway along the line of 430 festive seasons separating the earliest from the most recently-written music included in our programme. The Second Coming message is beautifully expressed in William Byrd’s Laetantur Coeli (1589), that begins our concert. At the other end of our chronology, John Merrick’s setting of Carol Ann Duffy’s The Bee Carol (winner of the 2018 BBC Radio 3 Carol competition) makes a connection between the winter behaviour of bees (messengers of a kind) as they cluster around the queen that will sustain their existence, and the “trembling” light from stars that announced the holy birth. Listen to the BBC Singers performing it in 2018.

Drawing on the music of several nations, from England we celebrate the 150th anniversary of the birth of Gustav Holst with his arrangement Long ago, prophets knew, to a tune from Pie Cantiones (1592) and the carol Lullay my Liking. From Central and Eastern Europe we have Kodály’s popular arrangement of O come, o come, Emmanuel (1943), Arvo Pärt’s swiftly rhythmic, King’s College commission Bogoroditsye Dyevo (1990) and the traditional Appalachian carol I wonder as I wander by Swiss composer Carl Rütti.

Closer to home, we are delighted to conclude with music by the choir’s President Ian Schofield. He wrote Benedicamus Domino, a sequence of three carols, for Portsmouth Choral Union in 1997.

The remainder of the programme draws on the 1999 Anthology Advent for Choirs, including Philip Ledger’s Adam lay ybounden, Stanford’s Benedictus in C and the anonymous 16th century anthem Rejoice in the Lord alway.

The United Reformed Church in Havant has a warm and friendly interior with fine acoustics: with mulled wine and mince pies in the interval and carols with audience participation, this will be a perfect way to progress the festive season.

Chris Clark

Article by GeneratePress

Lorem ipsum amet elit morbi dolor tortor. Vivamus eget mollis nostra ullam corper. Natoque tellus semper taciti nostra primis lectus donec tortor fusce morbi risus curae. Semper pharetra montes habitant congue integer nisi.

Sign up for our newsletter

Sign Up