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Soundtracks

Angel Voices: Libera In Concert

Angel Voices: Libera In Concert

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Creators: Gustav Holst, Engelbert Humperdinck, William Henry Monk, Takatsugu Muramatsu, Robert Prizeman, Robert / Tilley, Ian Prizeman, Fiona Pears, Ben Philipp, Ed Day, Joe Snelling, Joshua Madine, Liam Connery, Sam Leggett, Tom Cully
Label: EMI Classics
Category: Music

List Price: $18.98
Buy New: $7.99
You Save: $10.99 (58%)



New (32) Used (8) from $7.29

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 22 reviews
Sales Rank: 7691

Format: Live
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

EAN: 5099950317226
ASIN: B000VNMS7Y

Release Date: October 2, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • Adoramus
  • Going Home
  • Far Away
  • Prayer
  • Libera
  • Sanctus
  • Salva Me
  • Lacrymosa
  • Abide With Me
  • I Vow to Thee My Country
  • Stay With Me
  • Do Not Stand At My Grave & Weep
  • I Am the Day

Similar Items:

  • Angel Voices: Libera In Concert
  • Angel Voices
  • New Dawn
  • Free
  • Libera

Customer Reviews:   Read 17 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Outstanding boys choir   October 5, 2008
Outstanding! I love the music of boy's choirs, but so often the CDs also contain a lot of symphony, adult choirs, adult soloists, etc.... I don't want all that extra stuff, just the beauty of boys' voices. This is it! It's a bit comtemporary at times, but there is a nice mix with traditional music and the change from one to the other is barely noticable unless you are familiar with the selections. Soothing, relaxing, and gorgeous harmonies. I really love this, and so does my young toddler son. I can't recommend it highly enough.


5 out of 5 stars Par for Libera   May 24, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Libera's live performance at St. Peter's Church in Leiden, Holland, showcased a broad cross-section of their work. Despite the similarity in titles, the track listings for this live CD and the studio "Angel Voices" (the white cover) are not exactly the same.

The fleet-footed, dexterous opening, "Adoramus" (first heard on "Free"), is almost the only number of its kind; immediately afterward, "Going Home" (based on Dvorak's "Largo" from the New World Symphony) slows the ambience down to spotlight the serene warmth of the soloist's (Joshua Madine) voice. The music for the Leiden concert is weighted toward Libera's meditative, even more melancholy work. "Lacrymosa," first heard on "Luminosa," is based on the "Aquarium" from Saint-Saens' Carnival of the Animals, and is a remarkably mature piece--the shimmering, twistingly chromatic textures of the top voices contrast strikingly with the almost desperate pleading of the soloist's line.

The group's eponymous "Libera" is given a rousing, powerful performance that's as good or better than any of their studio cuts of the piece; the popular "Salva Me" and "Sanctus" are also sung with verve and energy. The best of Libera's solo talent is put on display in "Going Home," "Salva Me," and the closing "I am the Day," which alternates between gentle lullabying for the soloist and the full power of the ensemble.

"Do Not Stand," featuring one of Libera's greatest talent in Tom Cully, is peerless--the group's most moving and mature performance, ever.

The recording at Leiden was made live, and includes all the trademarks of a live performance: applause especially, and a few passages where the singing wavers. The benefit of the live nature, though, is the spontaneity and human quality that can be felt throughout the whole disc. The "Adoramus" begins almost tenatively; as the concert progresses, everyone is audibly becoming more secure, leading to a rousingly uplifting ending on "I am the Day."

And finally, for skeptics (or those pesky "ultrapursists") who have parroted their line about the "Libera sound" being more the product of very clever sound engineering and manipulation than the ensemble's talent, here's definitive proof to end that debate.

First timers would be better to start with "Luminosa"(Luminosa) or the studio disc "Angel Voices" (Angel Voices), as these are just slightly superior in terms of balance (the live disc trends very distinctly toward the melancholy and meditative). However, the magnificent performance at Leiden is definitely par for Libera.

Once again, Robert Prizeman and a group of English schoolboys prove, beyond any doubt, that the human voice is the greatest instrument of them all. God bless Libera!



5 out of 5 stars Let them touch your soul   April 23, 2008
The music is an amalgamation of classical church music with a New Age approach. Many musical notes are approached ever-so-softly with a quick crescendo; it's an idiosyncratic style that can be pretty annoying when you first listen. I don't feel that any one soloist voice distinguishes itself from the others, indeed, often I find it hard to tell who is singing the solo parts in any given number. So why do I find myself listening to this album, and a number of its predecessors time after time, maybe a hundred times or more by now? Well first it's the blend. True, no one voice from the group stands out as spectacular (like Jean Baptiste Maunier from "The Chorus"), but the blend is absolutely perfect. Then there's the musicianship--they're always in tune, indeed perfectly in tune, and they hit notes that can take your breath away. But that still really fails to explain the irresistible magnetism of this group. Seeing the boys, learning the little bit about them that they share in their DVD and online, and then listening to them sing, makes me laugh with them and forget that as children they will need to deal with a big, confusing, and scary world. The sound of Libera ensconces us, and them, in a sanctuary: a world in which, for a short time, there are no bullies on the playground, there are no tears. In my world, for the twenty or so minutes commuting to and from work, I am lifted to a place where there is no pain or misery that is a normal part of my job: for a brief time I might convince myself that none of the babies whose lives I have been entrusted with will suffer that day, and for a few minutes I can almost believe that I will not need to talk to parents, or have spoken to parents, about their children's irreversible damage or deaths. So for me, their music is an experience that is calming and transcendent. Listen to Libera, allow their sound to penetrate your soul and for a few evanescent minutes, your cares just melt away. I will be forever grateful to Mr. Prizeman (the choirmaster, arranger and composer of much of their music) and these boys of south London for the many precious moments of tranquility they have given me. Buy the album.


5 out of 5 stars Like voices from heaven!   April 20, 2008
Unbelievably gorgeous harmonies and melodies. I also got the DVD for a gift for my father & he loved it. The boys are adorable & their voices are truly angelic.


5 out of 5 stars Totally Speechless!   March 24, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I've been playing this inspired album repeatedly...obsessively and have no idea when I'll finally be able to tear myself away from it.

I wish the whole world could come to a sudden standstill, open its collective heart, and receive the divine gift of peace and serenity these wondrous voices bestow upon their listener.

Without doubt, this music is the expression of humanity's eternal yearning to unite with its own godliness.

Don't miss it for the world!!

Joel Kovacik
JoelBklyn@AOL.com



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