A Feast of Favourite Anthems

~ Release by The Jenkins Chorale, The Choir of Chelmsford Cathedral (see all versions of this release, 1 available)

Tracklist

1CD
#TitleArtistRatingLength
1Jesu, joy of man's desiring
sound engineer:
Lance Andrews (engineer)
producer:
Adrian Peacock (bass vocalist, producer)
organ:
Neil Weston (organist)
choir vocals:
The Choir of Chelmsford Cathedral
conductor:
Graham Elliott (choral conductor)
arranger:
Malcolm Archer (English organist and composer)
recording of:
Kantate, BWV 147 “Herz und Mund und Tat und Leben”: Teil II, X. Choral “Jesus bleibet meine Freude” (Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring; catch‐all for arrangements and unknown orchestrations)
composer:
Johann Sebastian Bach (German Baroque period composer & musician)
arrangement of:
Kantate, BWV 147 „Herz und Mund und Tat und Leben“: Teil II, X. Choral „Jesus bleibet meine Freude“ (Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring)
The Choir of Chelmsford Cathedral6:38
2O worship the King
choir vocals:
The Neil Jenkins Chorale (formerly Jenkins Family Singers)
conductor:
Neil Jenkins (tenor)
recording of:
O worship the King (arr. Neil Jenkins)
lyricist:
Robert Grant (British politician and writer)
composer:
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (classical composer)
arranger:
Neil Jenkins (tenor)
is based on:
Le nozze di Figaro, K. 492: Atto III (The Marriage of Figaro, K. 492: Act III)
is based on:
O worship the King (hymn to tune Hanover)
The Jenkins Chorale2:37
3Ave verum
choir vocals:
The Neil Jenkins Chorale (formerly Jenkins Family Singers)
conductor:
Neil Jenkins (tenor)
recording of:
Ave verum corpus, K. 618 (catch-all for arrangements)
composer:
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (classical composer) (in 1791)
arrangement of:
Ave verum corpus, K. 618 (for chorus, string and organ)
The Jenkins Chorale3:13
4Panis angelicus
choir vocals:
The Neil Jenkins Chorale (formerly Jenkins Family Singers)
conductor:
Neil Jenkins (tenor)
recording of:
Messe solennelle en la majeur, op. 12 : V. Panis Angelicus
lyricist:
St. Thomas Aquinas
composer:
César Franck (Belgian‐born French composer) (in 1860)
part of:
Messe solennelle en la majeur, op. 12
The Jenkins Chorale4:17
5Laudate Dominium
choir vocals:
The Neil Jenkins Chorale (formerly Jenkins Family Singers)
conductor:
Neil Jenkins (tenor)
recording of:
Vesperae solennes de confessore, K. 339: V. Laudate dominum
composer:
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (classical composer) (in 1780)
part of:
Vesperae solennes de confessore, K. 339
The Jenkins Chorale4:19
6Ave Maria
choir vocals:
The Neil Jenkins Chorale (formerly Jenkins Family Singers)
conductor:
Neil Jenkins (tenor)
recording of:
Ave Maria (Bach/Gounod)
lyricist:
[anonymous] (special purpose artist)
composer:
Johann Sebastian Bach (German Baroque period composer & musician) and Charles Gounod (French composer) (in 1853)
is based on:
Méditation sur le Premier Prélude de Piano de S. Bach
is based on:
The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I: Prelude and Fugue no. 1 in C major, BWV 846: Prelude
The Jenkins Chorale2:54
7God be in my head
choir vocals:
The Neil Jenkins Chorale (formerly Jenkins Family Singers)
conductor:
Neil Jenkins (tenor)
recording of:
God Be in My Head
composer:
Sir Henry Walford Davies (English organist and composer)
composed at:
Witham Hall in Lincolnshire, England, United Kingdom
The Jenkins Chorale1:58
8Jerusalem
choir vocals:
The Neil Jenkins Chorale (formerly Jenkins Family Singers)
conductor:
Neil Jenkins (tenor)
recording of:
Jerusalem (anthem by Hubert Parry)
lyricist:
William Blake (English poet, painter, and printmaker)
composer:
Hubert Parry (English composer) (in 1916)
is based on:
Jerusalem (poem by Blake)
The Jenkins Chorale3:10
9How beautiful upon the mountainsThe Choir of Chelmsford Cathedral4:30
10God so loved the worldThe Choir of Chelmsford Cathedral3:49
11Hear my prayer
sound engineer:
Lance Andrews (engineer)
producer:
James Whitbourn
organ:
Neil Weston (organist)
choir vocals:
The Choir of Chelmsford Cathedral
solo treble vocals:
Jonathan Cox (treble vocals, possibly a choir member), Timothy Meade (treble vocals, possibly a choir member) and Timothy Wayne‐Wright (countertenor vocalist)
conductor:
Graham Elliott (choral conductor)
recording of:
Hear My Prayer
composer:
Felix Mendelssohn (composer) (until 1844)
librettist:
William Bartholomew
premiered at:
Crosby Hall (Bishopsgate, London) in London (Greater London), England, United Kingdom (on 1845-01-08)
translated version of:
Hör mein Bitten (Hymne für Sopranstimme, Chor und Orgel)
The Choir of Chelmsford Cathedral11:12
12O salutaris hostia
sound engineer:
Lance Andrews (engineer)
producer:
James Whitbourn
organ:
Neil Weston (organist)
choir vocals:
The Choir of Chelmsford Cathedral
conductor:
Graham Elliott (choral conductor)
recording of:
O Salutaris hostia (unknown setting)
composer:
Edward Elgar (composer)
The Choir of Chelmsford Cathedral3:37