Edinburgh Festival Chorus

BEANBAG CONCERT SERIES

Find a beanbag and lose yourself in the hypnotic sound of Alexander Grechaninov’s Passion Week.

Alexander Grechaninov’s Passion Week (1912) for unaccompanied choir was virtually unknown until it was first recorded in the 1990s. It is now recognised as ‘a milestone in Russian choral music’ (Gramophone).

Passion Week offers a moving meditation on Christ’s capture, trial, crucifixion and resurrection. The texts, in Church Slavonic, come from the Orthodox Holy Week services, while the music pays tribute both to traditional Eastern European chants and to the luscious harmonic language of late Romanticism. Highlights include the dialogue between male and female singers in ‘In Thy Kingdom’, the funeral march of ‘The Noble Joseph’ and the quiet exultation of the concluding ‘Let All Mortal Flesh’, with its promise of eternal salvation.

Lose yourself in Grechaninov’s hypnotic sound in a late-night concert given by the ‘fabulous’ (The Telegraph) Edinburgh Festival Chorus and their director James Grossmith. Beanbags are provided for extra-comfortable seating.

The Warm Up: Edinburgh Festival Chorus

Edinburgh Festival Chorus Conductor James Grossmith and Chorus member Annette Chapman explore the background of Alexander Grechaninov's Passion Week and the experience of performing Russian choral music, transforming an ancient ritual into a modern setting. They share how their own pre-performance rituals connect them with the other performers, musicians and the audience.

The Warm Up: Edinburgh Festival Chorus

Supported by Sir Ewan and Lady Brown

Edinburgh Festival Chorus is supported by Risk Charitable Fund

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    Programme

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    Full Programme

    Edinburgh Festival Chorus
    James Grossmith Conductor

    Grechaninov Passion Week