Cappella Nova - Who are these Angels? - BBC Music Magazine
01 March 2012
BBC Music MagazineStephen Johnson

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Aside
from being very rewarding to sing, James Macmillan's religious music makes such
a refreshing change from what's usually offered in churches today. Approachable
without being apologetic, emotional but with a sense of dignity, the best of
these works can both delight and challenge. Wonderful surprises, like the
string quartet's seagull effects in Who are these Angels?, or the Gesualdo-like
harmonic shifts in
Pascha
nostrum immolatus est, rub shoulders with music that matches the
unselfconscious directness of folk or even pop music - MacMillan's early
experience in folk bands has done him no harm at all. At the same time, it must
be stressed that we are worlds away here from the limply syncopated pseudo-pop
that the church often seems to think will entice the people back into the pews.
The
backbone of this programme is the second set of Strathclyde Motets, and
this is where you'll generally find the most absorbing music. The Mass of
Blessed John Henry Newman strikes this listener as a little more
functionally liturgical - effective enough in context, but relatively short on
the kind of ideas that make you catch your breath. At the other end of the
scale is the simple but touching Think of how God loves you, written for
the baptism of the composer's granddaughter. (James MacMillan a grandfather?
Older readers take a deep breath!) Everything is performed with elegance and
the requisite intensity., and the recordings are clear and atmospheric.

Related Links
Canty
Cappella Nova
Who are these Angels?