Best composition? I wondered about that but it's a stupid question, especially given my limited knowledge, but my favourite work? I think so. I've listed every classical piece I've performed in concert (now 506 with some repeats) and it includes Beethoven 3,4,5,6,7 and plenty more, but my faves are choral and this seems my most memorable of all. Sitting through Brahms German Requiem by Igitur nos tends to confirm it. Gloriously rich and attractive, emotionally dense, wonderfully informed bass lines, extensive chromatic and substituting lines, beautiful harmonies in voices to drool over, high sopranos, inventive harmonies and challenging fugues. I closed my eyes and fell into this density, knowing it well after having played it myself. I find when I've practised and performed a work, it stays with me, so I know upcoming phasings and predict every line. Strange that practice, or perhaps performance, can be so permanent. I can't play from memory but I can revisit and predict a listen. Hayley did a great job on so many lines, slow or busy as they were. Otherwise, just a small accompaniment of piano, single strings and woodwinds, 8 players in all in the arrangements, rather than a full orchestra. And the choir and two soloists, bass and soprano. Very nice soloists, but I preferred the massed parts, the power and precision and movements of lines in harmony. My German was nil, so the words were of nothing, but still power remained and glorious, emotional music. Brahms German Requiem: a work of beauty and huge emotional density.
Igitur Nos performed Brahms German Requiem at Wesley. Matthew Stuckings (conductor) led a choir of 22 with two vocal soloists, Elsa Huber (soprano) and Colin Milner (baritone) and an octet comprising Rowan Harvey-Martin (violin), Elizabeth Chalker (viola), Alex Voorhoeve (cello), Hayley Manning (bass), Jodie Petrov (flute), Yu-Lan Chan (oboe), Lis Hoorweg (clarinet) and Emily Leong (piano).































