Skip to main content alibris logo
William Mathias: Choral Music - Aïda Lahlou (piano); David Ellis (bells); David Ellis (chimes); Glen Dempsey (piano); Hugh Crook (organ);...
Filter Results
Shipping
Item Condition
Seller Rating
Other Options
Change Currency
Track Listing
  1. A Babe Is Born, for chorus & organ, Op. 55
  2. Jesus College Service (Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis), for chorus & organ, Op. 53
  3. Learsongs, for chorus & piano, 4 hands
  4. Y nefoedd sydd yn datgan gogoniant Duw (The Heavens Declare the Glory of God), for chorus & organ
  5. Ave verum corpus, for chorus
Show All Tracks
  1. A Babe Is Born, for chorus & organ, Op. 55
  2. Jesus College Service (Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis), for chorus & organ, Op. 53
  3. Learsongs, for chorus & piano, 4 hands
  4. Y nefoedd sydd yn datgan gogoniant Duw (The Heavens Declare the Glory of God), for chorus & organ
  5. Ave verum corpus, for chorus
  6. Riddles, for soloists, chorus, bells & piano
  7. A May Magnificat, for double chorus & chimes, Op. 79/2
Show Fewer Tracks
Browse related Genres
+ Browse All Genres

Composer William Mathias, active in the second half of the 20th century, composed a good deal of choral music, some of it in his native Welsh. It's quite varied, and although it has been somewhat neglected since later crowd-pleasers came along, it's worth a revival on the evidence here. Best of all are a pair of secular works, the Learsongs of 1988, and the Riddles of the preceding year. The texts, by Edward Lear in the former case and from medieval literature (adapted into modern English) in the latter, are humorous, but ...

loading