Tenebrae is Latin and translates to Shadows or Darkness in English. Thus the theme continues in this Holy Week series at Wesley Church. This concert was a revisit by Igitur Nos under DM Matthew Stuckings and presented a collection of works suitable for Lent, drawing on scripture, poetry and liturgical texts and inviting interest in matters including loss and grief, comfort and isolation, solidarity and renewal. Thanks to Matthew (presumably) for these words. In practice, the music was richly varied, a capella, SATB to 8 parts, with works by Gibbons, Byrd, Wood, Puseley, Greene, Tchaikovsky, Goreki, Poulenc, Bairstow and Harris. The voices were pure and well controlled, interleaving with precision, highlighting variously soprano or tenor or whatever, sometimes fairly simple, othertimes busy and changing between multiple parts. Again, I loved the soaring sopranos, but also male voices when they were prominent. Igitur Nos is a wonderfully satisfying choir by one of our major local leaders. Satisfying and sometimes thrilling. And the Gibbons encore was a great choice, highlighting the best of the busy interplay, clear voices and voicings.
Igitur Nos were 27 SATB voices led by Matthew Stuckings (conductor, MD) with occasional accompaniment by aJmes Porteous (organ). They performed at Wesley Church.