Lucija Garuta: Apple Tree
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Description
Lucija Garuta (1902-1977) was one of the first Latvian professional female composers. She wrote dozens of a cappella choral works, but only now, with this album, are several of those songs experiencing their premieres.
Like most composers born in Latvia in the early 20th century and who lived through the Soviet occupation, Garuta's work can be divided into periods before and after the Second World War. In the memoirs of her contemporaries from the 1930s, we read about venues full to overflowing on evenings featuring Garuta's solo songs, when the young composer herself, who had studied in Paris (1926-1928) alongside studies at the Latvian Conservatoire, sat at the piano and accompanied the brightest soloists of the day, including soprano Milda Brehmane-Stengele, mezzo-soprano Herta Luse, tenor Mariss Vetra and baritone Adolfs Kaktins. Garuta was admired for her unusual interplay of thoughts that reflected on current trends in the world of music at the time, bravely defending even the ideas of Les Six, but at the same time remained faithful to elements of Latvian music, especially praising the Latvian folk song.
The Latvian Radio Choir is a unique, award-winning ensemble of professional singers that offers its audiences an extraordinarily broad repertoire, indulging in studies of early music as well as the elegance of Classicism, balancing the overflowing emotions of the Romantics and enthusiastically exploring scores by contemporary composers. The choir has always taken a special interest in Latvian choral music, seeking out and often premiering undeservedly forgotten contributions.
The Latvian Radio Choir participated in the recording of the Grammy Award-winning album Adam's Lament (ECM), composed by Arvo Part. The choir's recording of Sergei Rachmaninov's All-Night Vigil was praised by the British magazine Gramophone as the best recording of February 2013 and ranked among the 25 best albums of the year by the American radio station NPR. Its recording of Tchaikovsky's Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom and Nine Sacred Choruses (Ondine) won the International Classical Music Awards/ICMA for best choral recording of the year in 2020 and was later shortlisted for BBC Music Magazine's Recording of the Year award. This is Latvian Radio Choir's 13th release on SKANi label.
"a lovely album of harmonically rich and ever-ambiguous choral pieces by a composer whose adult life was passed under Soviet occupation […]. It's to the immense credit of the Latvian Radio Choir that they manage to communicate this with simplicity and grace and no heavy-handedness." – Choir & Organ ****
"The choir, as usual these days, is absolutely outstanding. Technically accomplished and beauteous of tone, they are a pleasure to hear. […] The recording is natural and spacious; I cannot imagine it being improved upon." – MusicWeb International
Tracklisting
Latvian Radio Choir, Sigvards Klava
Various Artists
Liga Priede, Andrejs Grimms
Atomos Saxophone Quartet
Latvian Radio Choir
Liepaja Symphony Orchestra
Liepaja Symphony Orchestra, Atvars Lakstigala
Various Artists
Latvian Radio Choir, Sigvards Klava
Latvian Radio Choir
Latvian Radio Choir
Latvian Radio Choir, Sigvards Klava
Latvian Radio Choir, Sigvards Klava, Kaspars Putnins
Latvian Radio Choir, Kaspars Putnins
Latvian Radio Choir, Sigvards Klava, Kaspars Putnins