Just love this requiem by Eleanor Daley, beautiful writing for voices and lovely rich harmony with some crunchy dissonances. Love the acapella sound. Deserves me to up there with the Faure, Duruffle, Herbert Howells, John Rutter, Karl Jenkins & Howard Goodhall! Ms Daley deserves to be better known, I hope to hear and learn more of her works.
I've been performing music for nearly 25 years and singing bass for 15 of them. This is easily one of the most demanding pieces of music I've ever done. Totally worth it because it's gorgeous.
My daughters all female ensemble just sang Ave Maria which I thought was beautiful so now I'm going down the Eleanor Daley rabbit hole. She makes some beautiful chord and voice choices, definitely reminds me of John Rutter's stuff as well.
+William Ford There's a lot more amazing female composers, some Canadian. Here's a few suggestions for you: Ruth Elaine Schram Vicki Tucker Courtney Kathleen Allan (Canadian) Nancy Telfer (Canadian) Dianne Loomer (Canadian) Happy Googling!
0:00 Requeim Aeternam Parts: SSATBB with S solo Form: 0:00 - 0-8 choral introduction “Requiem Aeternam” 0:20 - 9-16 S solo “Each night I listened for your call. When your call stopped I held my breath, suspended” “Dona Eis Domine” 0:40 - 17-24 S solo “I’d grow accustomed to a dialogue with silence, and wait for the sounds of night” 1:03 - 25-28 fragmented recap “Each night I listened for your call” 1:14 - 29-30 Choral transition to coda 1:21 - 31-38 Coda “Sempiternam Requiem” “You, dying, and I but witness to the end” 1:56 Out Of The Deep 1:56 - 39-42 AB open, ST enter in 41 “Out of the deep have I called into Thee. O Lord” “Lord, Hear my voice” 2:13 - 43-45 ST open, A and B enter at 44 “Out of the deep have I called unto Thee. O Lord” 2:25 - 46-48 SATB cascading lines on “Lord” “Lord, hear my voice” 2:40 - 49-52 SAT, B enter in 50 “O let Thine ears consider well: the voice of my complaint” 2:52 - 53-56 B pickup, SAT enter in 53 “If Thou Lord wilt be Extreme to mark what is done amiss” 3:09 - 57-58 “O Lord, who may abide it?” 3:18 - 59-61 SAT only “For there is mercy with Thee: therefore shalt Thou be feared” 3:29 - 62-63 “I look for the Lord: my soup doth wait for Him:” 3:36 - 64-65 “And in His word is my trust” 3:46 - 66-68 “In His word is my trust” 3:58 - 69-74 “My soul fleets unto the Lord” “Fleets unto the Lord” “Before the morning watch, I say,” “Before” “Before the morning watch” 4:23 - 74-75 “O Israel, trust in the Lord,” 4:30 - 77-78 “For with the Lord there is mercy:” 4:36 - 79-82 “And with Him is plenteous redemption” 4:48 - 82-86 “And He shall redeem Israel from their sins” 5:06 - 87-89 “Out of the deep have I called into Thee, O Lord” “Lord, hear my voice” 5:32 And God Shall Wipe Away All Tears 5:32 - 90-91 S solo, A1A2 enter in 91 “I heard a voice out of heaven” “Saying” 5:40 - 93-94 SSAA “Behold, the dwelling of God is with all people” 5:50 - 95-96 “And God shall dwell with them” 5:57 - 97-98 “And they shall be God’s people.” 6:06 - 99-100 “God shall be with them” 6:13 - 101-104 “And the Voice of weeping shall no more be heard” 6:31 - 105-108 “And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes,” 6:44 - 109-110 “And there shall be no more death,” 6:51 - 111-112 “And there shall be no more death,” 6:56 - 113-114 “Neither sorrow, nor crying,” 7:05 - 115-116 “Neither shall there be anymore pain” 7:14 - 117-119 “For the former things are passed away” 7:21 - 119-122 B enter in 119, T in 121 “Lux aeterna” “Luceat eis” 7:32 - 123-124 “Luceat eis” 7:42 - 125-127 “Luceat eis” 7:55 - 128-131 “Luceat eis, Domine” 8:12 - 132-136 T with melody, B enter in 134, SSA echo in 135 “I am the resurrection and the life, saith the Lord” “Saith the Lord” 8:26 - 137-140 “He that believeth in me, though he were dead” “In me” “Though he were dead” 8:39 - 141-142 “Yet shall he live” 8:47 - 143-145 “And whosoever liveth and believeth in me” 9:00 - 146-148 “Shall never, never die” “Shall never die” 9:23 In Remembrance 12:22 I Heard A Voice From Heaven 14:06 Thou Knowest, Lord 17:34 Requiem Ataernam II 18:38 In Paradisum
Reilly, this recording was done in conjunction with composer Eleanor, so tempo of In Remembrance is as she intends. I have sung this with her numerous times, and this is her tempo. And Norah, you are right, the whole work should not be displayed like this on RUclips!
On the other hand, if the work were not thus displayed I would not have listened to the whole thing, because I would not have been able to discern the words without the score.
I love the tempo! I have heard some recordings that are sooooo slow and I think they become too indulgent and lose the comforting nature of that piece. This whole recording is so lovely and beautifully sung.
The Cellar Singers get to perform this on March 28, 2015 in Orillia. Our Artistic Director Mitchell Pady sings with the Elmer Iseler Singers. Must check if he sang on this one. Not sure what Eleanor Daley thinks about her sheet music displayed publicly but it will certainly help me learn my part. We're singing the Fauré Requiem the same night.
I feel so privileged to be a part of this recording, with Lydia Adams conducting. Eleanor was our accompanist so to sing her work was even more special. One of my highlights of choral singing.
yann c Andrew Cranston It's the Amadeus Choir, for whom the composer is, or at least was last I heard, their accompanist. www.amadeuschoir.com Sing on!
Just love this requiem by Eleanor Daley, beautiful writing for voices and lovely rich harmony with some crunchy dissonances. Love the acapella sound. Deserves me to up there with the Faure, Duruffle, Herbert Howells, John Rutter, Karl Jenkins & Howard Goodhall! Ms Daley deserves to be better known, I hope to hear and learn more of her works.
I've been performing music for nearly 25 years and singing bass for 15 of them. This is easily one of the most demanding pieces of music I've ever done.
Totally worth it because it's gorgeous.
My daughters all female ensemble just sang Ave Maria which I thought was beautiful so now I'm going down the Eleanor Daley rabbit hole. She makes some beautiful chord and voice choices, definitely reminds me of John Rutter's stuff as well.
Daley is one of the few female composers of whom I know, and one of the few who has/had come so far.
+William Ford There's a lot more amazing female composers, some Canadian. Here's a few suggestions for you:
Ruth Elaine Schram
Vicki Tucker Courtney
Kathleen Allan (Canadian)
Nancy Telfer (Canadian)
Dianne Loomer (Canadian)
Happy Googling!
This was totally hair raising beautiful. It lifted my soul. Thank you.
0:00 Requeim Aeternam
Parts: SSATBB with S solo
Form:
0:00 - 0-8 choral introduction
“Requiem Aeternam”
0:20 - 9-16 S solo
“Each night I listened for your call. When your call stopped I held my breath, suspended”
“Dona Eis Domine”
0:40 - 17-24 S solo
“I’d grow accustomed to a dialogue with silence, and wait for the sounds of night”
1:03 - 25-28 fragmented recap
“Each night I listened for your call”
1:14 - 29-30 Choral transition to coda
1:21 - 31-38 Coda
“Sempiternam Requiem”
“You, dying, and I but witness to the end”
1:56 Out Of The Deep
1:56 - 39-42 AB open, ST enter in 41
“Out of the deep have I called into Thee. O Lord”
“Lord, Hear my voice”
2:13 - 43-45 ST open, A and B enter at 44
“Out of the deep have I called unto Thee. O Lord”
2:25 - 46-48 SATB cascading lines on “Lord”
“Lord, hear my voice”
2:40 - 49-52 SAT, B enter in 50
“O let Thine ears consider well: the voice of my complaint”
2:52 - 53-56 B pickup, SAT enter in 53
“If Thou Lord wilt be Extreme to mark what is done amiss”
3:09 - 57-58
“O Lord, who may abide it?”
3:18 - 59-61 SAT only
“For there is mercy with Thee: therefore shalt Thou be feared”
3:29 - 62-63
“I look for the Lord: my soup doth wait for Him:”
3:36 - 64-65
“And in His word is my trust”
3:46 - 66-68
“In His word is my trust”
3:58 - 69-74
“My soul fleets unto the Lord”
“Fleets unto the Lord”
“Before the morning watch, I say,”
“Before”
“Before the morning watch”
4:23 - 74-75
“O Israel, trust in the Lord,”
4:30 - 77-78
“For with the Lord there is mercy:”
4:36 - 79-82
“And with Him is plenteous redemption”
4:48 - 82-86
“And He shall redeem Israel from their sins”
5:06 - 87-89
“Out of the deep have I called into Thee, O Lord”
“Lord, hear my voice”
5:32 And God Shall Wipe Away All Tears
5:32 - 90-91 S solo, A1A2 enter in 91
“I heard a voice out of heaven”
“Saying”
5:40 - 93-94 SSAA
“Behold, the dwelling of God is with all people”
5:50 - 95-96
“And God shall dwell with them”
5:57 - 97-98
“And they shall be God’s people.”
6:06 - 99-100
“God shall be with them”
6:13 - 101-104
“And the Voice of weeping shall no more be heard”
6:31 - 105-108
“And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes,”
6:44 - 109-110
“And there shall be no more death,”
6:51 - 111-112
“And there shall be no more death,”
6:56 - 113-114
“Neither sorrow, nor crying,”
7:05 - 115-116
“Neither shall there be anymore pain”
7:14 - 117-119
“For the former things are passed away”
7:21 - 119-122 B enter in 119, T in 121
“Lux aeterna”
“Luceat eis”
7:32 - 123-124
“Luceat eis”
7:42 - 125-127
“Luceat eis”
7:55 - 128-131
“Luceat eis, Domine”
8:12 - 132-136 T with melody, B enter in 134, SSA echo in 135
“I am the resurrection and the life, saith the Lord”
“Saith the Lord”
8:26 - 137-140
“He that believeth in me, though he were dead”
“In me”
“Though he were dead”
8:39 - 141-142
“Yet shall he live”
8:47 - 143-145
“And whosoever liveth and believeth in me”
9:00 - 146-148
“Shall never, never die”
“Shall never die”
9:23 In Remembrance
12:22 I Heard A Voice From Heaven
14:06 Thou Knowest, Lord
17:34 Requiem Ataernam II
18:38 In Paradisum
Reilly, this recording was done in conjunction with composer Eleanor, so tempo of In Remembrance is as she intends. I have sung this with her numerous times, and this is her tempo.
And Norah, you are right, the whole work should not be displayed like this on RUclips!
On the other hand, if the work were not thus displayed I would not have listened to the whole thing, because I would not have been able to discern the words without the score.
I love the tempo! I have heard some recordings that are sooooo slow and I think they become too indulgent and lose the comforting nature of that piece. This whole recording is so lovely and beautifully sung.
The Cellar Singers get to perform this on March 28, 2015 in Orillia. Our Artistic Director Mitchell Pady sings with the Elmer Iseler Singers. Must check if he sang on this one. Not sure what Eleanor Daley thinks about her sheet music displayed publicly but it will certainly help me learn my part.
We're singing the Fauré Requiem the same night.
It's also great for conductors like me who are thinking of buying it for my choir. A lovely piece!
Toronto's Amadeus Choir (with members of the Elmer Iseler Singers.)
Carrie, when was this recording done, do you know? Or if it's available anywhere? You're sure it's the AC?
+Andrew Cranston This is on Amadeus Choir's 2001 album Songs of the Spirit.
I feel so privileged to be a part of this recording, with Lydia Adams conducting. Eleanor was our accompanist so to sing her work was even more special. One of my highlights of choral singing.
Lovely work, in the spirit of Howell's "Requiem," but perhaps not so difficult. Many stand-alone movements, or pairings that could be created.
Bravi tutti
Hi! I am really looking for the sheets of this lovely piece, do you know how can i get it?
A fairly heterodox requiem that doesn't even include the ordinary of the Liturgy.
Joli ! Quel choeur chante ?
Yes, I too would like to know who's singing. It's a near flawless rendition.
Hey, I found the audio on the site of Northwestern Michigan College.
yann c Andrew Cranston It's the Amadeus Choir, for whom the composer is, or at least was last I heard, their accompanist. www.amadeuschoir.com Sing on!
In remembrance's tempo is entirely too fast, it ruins the tender and gentleness of the piece and it's message.
Meow
Bark! Bark!
Quack Quack