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1 CD
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€ 19.95
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| Label Signum Classics |
UPC 0635212072929 |
Catalogue number SIGCD 729 |
Release date 03 February 2023 |
James MacMillan is one of today’s most successful composers and is also internationally active as a conductor. His musical language is flooded with influences from his Scottish heritage, Catholic faith, social conscience and close connection with Celtic folk music, blended with influences from Far Eastern, Scandinavian and Eastern European music.
MacMillan first became internationally recognized after the extraordinary success of The Confession of Isobel Gowdie at the BBC Proms in 1990.
His prolific output has since been performed and broadcast around the world. His major works include percussion concerto Veni, Veni, Emmanuel, which
has received more than 400 performances, a cello concerto for Mstislav Rostropovich and three symphonies. Recent major works include his
St John Passion co-commissioned by the London Symphony Orchestra,
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Berlin Radio Choir, his Violin Concerto, Viola Concerto, St Luke Passion and, most recently, his Percussion Concerto No.2 for Colin Currie, co-commissioned by the Philharmonia Orchestra, Edinburgh International Festival, Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchestre National du Capitole de Toulouse, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Sao Paulo Symphony Orchestra and Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music.
MacMillan enjoys a flourishing career as conductor of his own music alongside a range of contemporary and standard repertoire, praised for the composer’s
insight he brings to each score. He was Principal Guest Conductor of the Netherlands Radio Chamber Philharmonic until 2013 and was Composer/ Conductor of the BBC Philharmonic from 2000-2009; he has conducted orchestras such as the Baltimore Symphony, Rotterdam Philharmonic, Munich Philharmonic, Vienna Radio Symphony, Danish Radio Symphony, Gothenburg Symphony, Luxembourg Philharmonic, City of Birmingham Symphony, Bournemouth Symphony, Toronto Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic,
New Zealand Symphony Orchestra and NHK Symphony Orchestra among others. MacMillan was Composer in Residence at the 2012 Grafenegg Festival and a London Symphony Orchestra Portrait Artist in the 2009/10 season.
In spring 2014 MacMillan conducted three projects with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, culminating in a ground-breaking tour to India with Nicola Benedetti performing in Chennai, Mumbai and Delhi including
public concerts, schools concerts and outreach work. In the 2014/15 season, MacMillan conducts orchestras including the Bergen Philharmonic, the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra and the Britten Sinfonia. In January 2015 he conducts a new production of his opera, Inés de Castro, at Scottish Opera and elsewhere this season conducts choral concerts in Sao Paulo and with the BBC Singers. In October 2014 MacMillan founded his music festival, The Cumnock Tryst, which takes place in his native Ayrshire.
Cecilia McDowall (b. 1951) is one of the UK’s leading composers of sacred and secular choral music and has won many awards including, in 2014, the British Composer Award in the Choral category for her haunting work, Night Flight. McDowall’s distinctive style fuses fluent melodic lines with occasional dissonant harmonies and rhythmic exuberance. Her music has been commissioned and performed by such leading organisations as the BBC Singers, St Paul’s Cathedral, Westminster Cathedral, The Sixteen, Tenebrae, Oxford and Cambridge choirs, and festivals worldwide.
In 2020 McDowall was presented with the prestigious Ivor Novello Award for a ‘consistently excellent body of work’. This was a ‘Gift’ from The Ivors Academy. Her works have been extensively recorded, and in 2021 Hyperion released an album of her sacred works by the Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge. Also in 2021, McDowall was given the coveted annual commission by King’s College, Cambridge, to write the carol (There is no rose) for the Choir of King’s College and their music director, Daniel Hyde, to be part of the much-loved Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols broadcast worldwide on Christmas Eve.
In 2023, Signum released an album of McDowall’s Da Vinci Requiem – a significant seven-movement work which creatively combines excerpts from Leonardo da Vinci’s notebooks with texts from the Latin Missa pro defunctis. The orchestral song cycle, Seventy Degrees Below Zero, is on the same disc. In 2025 Resonus Classics released an album of four cantatas including The Ice is Listening. Also, in 2025, the Royal College of Organists awarded McDowall its highest honour, the RCO Medal, in recognition of her ‘distinguished achievement in choral composition’.
International Record Review has praised her for “a communicative gift that is very rare in modern music”.