 
Morten Lauridsen
Modern choral music for amateur singers
may be America's biggest musical underground. That's the only
explanation of why Grammy-nominated composer Morten Lauridsen
can claim that his works are some of the most often-performed
new pieces in years, although few among the East Coast intelligentsia
have ever heard Lauridsen . Like the similarly popular John Rutter,
Lauridsen inhabits an extremely conservative style directed simply
and single-mindedly at showing off the beauty of choral singing
while it illustrates inspiring texts. Unlike many of his fellow
neo-Romantic conservatives,Lauridsen displays a brand of conservatism
that is completely convincing and sincere. His music also has
range, from the spellbindingly rapturous Lux aeterna to his playful
settings of Rilke's poems about the beauty and thorniness of
roses in Les chansons des roses. There is, moreover, a Coplandesque
streak heard in his Mid-Winter Songs, which are settings of poems
by Robert Graves. Though the Los Angeles Master Chorale has a
suitably red-blooded sound, the music would be better served
with more precise diction. --David Patrick Stearns |