Origins Sjaella
Album info
Album-Release:
2021
HRA-Release:
08.10.2021
Label: Fuga Libera
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Vocal
Artist: Sjaella
Composer: David Lang (1957), Henry Lawes (1596-1662), Henry Purcell (1659-1695), Robert Johnson (1582-1633), Eriks Esenvalds (1977), Paola Prestini (1975)
Album including Album cover
- David Lang (b. 1957):
- 1 Lang: Evening Morning Day 08:13
- Henry Lawes (1595 - 1662):
- 2 Lawes: Have You e’er seen the Morning Sun? (Arr. for Choir) 02:31
- Henry Purcell (1659 - 1695):
- 3 Purcell: Thus the Ever Grateful Spring (Spring) 02:26
- 4 Purcell: Here’s the Summer, Sprightly, Gay (Summer) 03:10
- 5 Purcell: See My Many Coloured Fields (Autumn) 02:45
- 6 Purcell: Now Winter Comes Slowly (Winter) 02:27
- Meredi (b. 1978):
- 7 Meredi: Crystallized 10:03
- Sjaella (Founded 2005):
- 8 Sjaella: Hypophysis 08:53
- Robert Johnson (1583 - 1633):
- 9 Johnson: Have You Seen the Bright Lily Grow? 02:02
- Henry Purcell:
- 10 Purcell: See, Even Night Herself is Here (Night) 03:25
- 11 Purcell: I Am Come to Lock All Fast (Mystery) 01:38
- 12 Purcell: One Charming Night (Secrecy) 02:13
- 13 Purcell: Hush, no More (Sleep) 03:21
- Ēriks Ešenvalds (b. 1977):
- 14 Ešenvalds: Stars 03:45
- Paola Prestini (b. 1975):
- 15 Prestini: A Triptych for Our Time: I Apocalypse? 04:00
- 16 Prestini: A Triptych for Our Time: II Dead Soul 04:20
- 17 Prestini: A Triptych for Our Time: III Ascending Stairways 02:08
- Sjaella:
- 18 Sjaella: Vacuum 07:54
Info for Origins
Sjaella is the vocal ensemble of the moment to discover! Six talented and effervescent female singers who are not afraid of anything and demonstrate as much in a programme entitled Origins, ranging from seventieth-century repertory to contemporary pieces. Out of the ether, into existence. The initial point. The beginning. The ever-recurring origin. Between minimalism and picturesque arias arise light, time, and all life. In Origins, the female vocal ensemble Sjaella focuses on natural cycles that have surrounded us since the dawn of time. In every era, people have experienced the changes in the seasons, the gentle rhythm of day and night, the individual flow of the body, and the transience of rebirth. All of these themes are presented as a unit, which forms a cycle of key concepts from the origin of life to a post-apocalyptic vacuum. The music contrasts and combines new arrangements of English songs of the seventeenth century, some of them from Henry Purcell’s The Fairy Queen, with contemporary pieces, including those in the American Minimalist style, such as David Lang’s Evening, Morning, Day. By including mainly commissioned works, the album shows Sjaella’s close collaboration with renowned international composers such as Paola Prestini, singer-songwriter Shara Nova and former King’s Singers member Philip Lawson.
Sjaella
Sjaella
Uniform yet individual, gentle yet robust, precise yet free-flowing - this versality is what Sjaella's sound is all about. The six singers joined forces many moons ago and continue to discover new ways to diversify their sound. They are open to new influences, love musical diversity and have the courage to challenge barriers. They are comfortable with their wide-ranging repertoire which comprises various genres. This very diversity coupled with the close relationship the group has with their fans has paved the way, for many years, for Sjaella’s participation in renowned music festivals both domestic and overseas and have been awarded first prizes at international vocal music competitions.
This album contains no booklet.