Voices of Summer Sale
Celebrate the season with the Voices of Summer Sale at ArkivMusic! Discover over 600 vocal favorites—from soaring choral masterpieces and intimate vocal ensembles to unforgettable opera performances—all 25%–30% off for a limited time.
Discover music from Shostakovich, Schumman, Monteverdi and more; as well as stellar performances from Jamie Barton, Bach Collegium Japan, Voces8 and many more!
Shop the sale now before it ends at 9:00am ET, Tuesday, August 11th, 2026.
653 products
Ghezzi: L'Adamo - Dialoghi sacri - Lamentationi per la Setti
Crucem tuam adoramus - Concerto per le sacre Ceneri 2007
Simple Gifts / King's Singers
For listeners who primarily identify with the King's Singers' classical-oriented programs, you should know that this is definitely not a "classical" album. Rather, nearly half of the songs are pop tunes (from James Taylor to Billy Joel to Paul Simon and Sting), and the rest--spirituals, ballads, and folksongs--feature arrangements that place them squarely in that genre. Of course, those arrangements are typically first-rate, owing primarily to the expertise of current ensemble member Philip Lawson and former King's Singer Bob Chilcott, both of whom have long experience supplying the group with fresh, original musical creations. New to this CD are Lawson's settings of Sting's "Valparaiso", Paul Simon's "April Come She Will", Randy Newman's "When She Loved Me", and James Taylor's "You Can Close Your Eyes".
Besides appreciating the impeccable vocals and clever, invariably entertaining arrangements of well-known songs ("Deep River", "Steal Away", "She's Always a Woman"), you can't help but notice--and possibly be distracted by--the sound, whose highly processed quality and close perspective can make the voices seem both uncomfortably near and otherworldly. It's a sonic cast--all done in a studio--that's quite different from other King's Singers recordings; some listeners will love it, others will, well, have to get used to it. And certainly, if you love this group--and who doesn't?--you've probably already reserved a place on the shelf.
--David Vernier, ClassicsToday.com
Tracks:
She’s Always a Woman (Billy Joel, arr. Philip Lawson)
You Can Close Your Eyes (James Taylor, arr. Philip Lawson)
Greensleeves (Trad. English, arr. Bob Chilcott)
The Gift to be Simple (Trad. American, arr. Bob Chilcott)
Swing Low, Sweet Chariot (Trad. Spiritual, arr. Peter Knight)
Helplessly Hoping (Stephen Stills, arr. Philip Lawson)
Deep River (Trad. Spiritual, arr. Philip Lawson)
Black is the Color (Trad. American/Scottish, arr. Bob Chilcott)
I Love my Love (Trad. English, arr. Philip Lawson)
The Water is Wide (Trad. English, arr. Philip Lawson)
When She Loved Me (Randy Newman, arr. Philip Lawson)
Valparaiso (Sting, arr. Philip Lawson)
The Turtle Dove (Trad. English, arr. Philip Lawson)
April Come She Will (Paul Simon, arr. Philip Lawson)
Steal Away (Trad. Spiritual, arr. Bob Chilcott)
You are the New Day (John David, arr. Peter Knight)
Gabrielli: S. Sigismondo, re di Borgogna
Monteverdi: Combattimento di Tancredi & Clorinda - Lamento d
Couperin & Lalande: Leçon de Tenebres / Kirkby, Mellon, Medlam, Charlston
Sibelius, J.: Sibelius Edition, Vol. 3 - Voice And Orchestr
Christmas Songs From The Koning Manuscript, Ca. 1500
Shostakovich: Trio No. 2 / Seven Romances to Poems By Alexan
Canteloube: Songs Of The Auvergne / Von Stade, Almeida
Im brechthaus
Liszt: Organ Works / Yves Rechsteiner
In 1855 the organ world in Germany discovered Franz Liszt's performance of his most famous transcriptions on the organ of Merseburg. Yves Rechsteiner recaptures the magic atmosphere of these concerts.
Fasolo: Secular Songs
Schubert: Winterreise / Mammel, Schoonderwoerd
Arriaga: Vocal Works, 1821-1825
Concerto Imperiale (L'héritage de Monteverdi)
Schubert & Mozart: Lieder
Mil suspiros dio Maria: Sacred and Secular Music From the Br
Songs and Dances from the Time of Guillaume Dufay
Tessier: Carnets De Voyages / Le Poème Harmonique
The works of the French lutenist and composer Charles Tessier give evidence of his vast curiosity and extensive travels in the years around 1600. His Premier livre de chansons & airs de cour tant en françois qu'en italien et en gascon à 4 & 5 parties appeared in London in 1597 with a preface in Italian; the title-page refers to him as musitien de la Chambre du Roy (i.e. musician to Henri IV of France). A second volume, entitled Airs et villanelles français, italiens, espagnols, suices et turcqs... a 3, 4 & 5 parties, was published in 1604. This set was dedicated to Moritz, Landgrave of Hesse. Its second edition (1610) appeared with a dedication to King Matthias of Hungary. Charles Tessier achieved a happy balance in his works between the different cultures of his time, with popular songs and refined airs de cour, a mixture of rusticity and delicacy that reflects the tastes of the court of Henri IV. His Italian and Swiss villanelles, his Spanish and Turkish airs - echoed on this recording by pieces written by contemporaries John Dowland, Leo Hassler and Moritz of Hesse - show how men and their works travelled within Europe during that peaceful period between the wars of religion and the Thirty Years' War. With this recording Le Poème Harmonique and Vincent Dumestre invite us to take a look at the travels and the encounters that enriched the joyful works of this very interesting composer. Recorded 28 October-1 November 2005, Chapel of Notre-Dame de Bon Secours, Paris Artistic direction, recording & editing: Hugues Deschaux.
Per la settimana santa
Villa-Lobos: Bachianas Brasileiras Nos. 1, 4-6
Schubert: Die Schone Mullerin / Elwes, Slowik
Vaughan Williams: The Sons Of Light; Holst, Parry
This was the first recording of "The Sons of Light". When I reviewed the second recording, by David Lloyd-Jones on Naxos, I found the Lyrita preferable, with more presence to the recording, more vital conducting and better choral diction. At that time there still seemed to be no prospect of the many Lyrita treasures ever seeing the light of day again. Now things are changing and this is the recording to get.
I referred in my review to the "coursing energy and phenomenal range of colour" of the work. It is, in its way, one of Vaughan Williams’s most impressive. You would certainly never imagine it was written to be sung by children – 1,150 of them at the first performance in 1951, with the accompaniment of the LPO under Boult. What worries me is that, every time I come to it, I find I don’t remember it. It’s not just that the themes don’t stay in my mind. As the work plays I don’t get any sense of recognition – "Ah, I remember that bit now". I hear it as a work I’ve never heard before. This is not a problem I have with Vaughan Williams generally.
Though I also had the LP containing "The Mystic Trumpeter" I never really listened to it often enough to say whether it sticks in my mind or not. I should think it unlikely. I find the same problem here as with Vaughan Williams’s "Willow-Wood", which was also on the Naxos/Lloyd-Jones disc. The composer has very skilfully set the poem line by line, with meaningful upward swoops for important words, pregnant key-changes and so on. He’s produced a nice wall-paper backing to a poem that is far more exciting when it’s simply read. But composition is about creation. It is a constructive process. If you start with an exhilarating poem and finish with a piece of music with about as much tension as a wet lettuce, is this to be defined as composition or decomposition? A work for Holst completists only. The performance is good enough, though Armstrong’s voice sometimes billows when it should soar. Holst seems to have a whopping Wagnerian soprano voice in mind and Armstrong, for all her virtues, was not exactly that. There is also a touch of opaqueness to some of her notes on the CD, though not on the LP.
The Parry is a far more memorable work. The composer had the good sense to choose a poem which provides a refrain. He does not repeat the same music every time but provides a new variation of it. The result is a sort of variation rondo form, combining continuous development with structural unity. Parry is at his finest and most eloquent throughout, from the lilting opening to the dancing energy of the later stanzas. There is a satisfying build-up which dies away to a touching close. There is also a lovely solo stanza, beautifully sung by Teresa Cahill. John Quinn noted in his review that her word underlay at the end of this stanza was at variance with the new edition he was using and wondered if the edition had been revised. I doubt it; I have a copy of the original edition and the textual underlay is different from what is sung there, too. Quite simply, the music as written calls unrealistically for a third lung, so I imagine Cahill herself changed the underlay in order to take a breath in the middle. Composers who aren’t singers miscalculate in this way more often than you’d expect – even Verdi did sometimes. Read John’s review, by the way; he has had the good fortune to sing in a rare performance of the work and his enthusiasm comes from within. But did the soprano at that performance cope with that long phrase in a single breath?
If Parry is at his best, so is Willcocks. It’s a thrilling performance from a great choral conductor. This is the only recording of the piece so far, but now it’s available again we hardly need another. Just for the record, I have always thought Cahill a little insecure in her opening phrase, but thereafter she is splendid. She has a lovely disc of R. Strauss and Rachmaninov to her credit and, unlike Sheila Armstrong in "The Mystic Trumpeter", her voice doesn’t billow, it soars.
Maybe in 1912 the Parry seemed old-fashioned. In 2007 it just seems timeless.
Outstanding recordings, as always with Lyrita, and notes by Ursula Vaughan Williams, Bernard Benoliel and Imogen Holst.
-- Christopher Howell, MusicWeb International
