Paul McCartney's Liverpool Oratorio | ||||
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Live album by | ||||
Released | 7 October 1991 (UK) 22 October 1991 (US) | |||
Recorded | 28–29 June 1991 | |||
Venue | Liverpool Cathedral | |||
Genre | Classical, opera | |||
Length | 97:28 | |||
Label | EMI Classics | |||
Producer | John Fraser | |||
Paul McCartney chronology | ||||
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Paul McCartney classical album chronology | ||||
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Singles from Paul McCartney's Liverpool Oratorio | ||||
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Paul McCartney's Liverpool Oratorio is a live album by Paul McCartney and Carl Davis, released in 1991. It is McCartney's first major foray into classical music. Composed in collaboration with Carl Davis to commemorate the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra's 150th anniversary, the project received media attention upon its unveiling in June 1991.
Recording
This recording was captured at the oratorio's dress rehearsal and premiere at Liverpool Cathedral with McCartney in attendance and features noted professional classical singers Kiri Te Kanawa, Jerry Hadley, Sally Burgess and Willard White re-enacting the roles in the oratorio. The recording was engineered by John Timperley.[1]
Music and story
Consisting of eight movements, the story of the oratorio loosely follows McCartney's own lifeline, with the main character, Shanty, who is born in 1942 in Liverpool, raised to believe that "being born where you are born carries with it certain responsibilities". After his school days where he often "sagged off" (Liverpool slang for skipping class), Shanty begins working and meets his future bride, Mary Dee. Following the death of his father, Shanty and Mary Dee are married and are forced to deal with the rigours of balancing a happy marriage and their careers. Amid a quarrel, Mary Dee reveals that she is pregnant and after surviving a nearly fatal accident, gives birth to their son. Thus, the cycle of life in Liverpool carries on.
Reception
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [2] |
Encyclopedia of Popular Music | [3] |
MusicHound | [4] |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | [5] |
The commercial reaction for the work was strong, with the oratorio spending many weeks atop the classical charts worldwide, and even charting at number 177 in regular album chart in the US. Critical reaction was mixed. Allan Kozinn, reviewing the Liverpool premiere for the New York Times in June 1991,[6] described the work as "a richly melodic, lavishly orchestrated piece about the loss and reclamation of innocence, love and faith." In particular, Kozinn noted "an exquisite soprano aria" and "a five-minute violin meditation that suggests Mr. McCartney could be a superb concerto composer." Some observed that the work, while attractive, was simplistic, overlong and, given its aspirations, insubstantial.[7][8][9]
Track listing
All pieces by Paul McCartney and Carl Davis. The first four movements are on CD disc one, the second four on disc two.
Disc one
Side one
- Movement I – War
- Andante (Orchestra) – 2:02
- 'Non Nobis Solum' – 2:35
- 'The Air Raid Siren Slices Through...' (Shanty) – 2:09
- 'Oh Will It All End Here?' (Shanty) – 1:36
- 'Mother and Father Holding Their Child' – 1:16
- Movement II – School
- 'We're Here in School Today to Get a Perfect Education' – 2:10
- 'Walk in Single File Out of the Classroom' (Headmaster) – 1:02
- 'Settle Down' – 0:40
- 'Kept in Confusion' (Shanty) – 2:35
- 'I'll Always Be Here' (Mary Dee) – 1:35
- 'Boys, This Is Your Teacher' (Headmaster, Miss Inkley) – 1:23
- 'Tres Conejos' (Miss Inkley, Headmaster, Shanty) – 1:50
- 'Not for Ourselves' (Headmaster, Miss Inkley, Shanty) – 0:55
Side two
- Movement III – Crypt
- 'And So It Was That I Had Grown' (Shanty) – 0:48
- Dance – 1:44
- 'I Used to Come Here When This Place Was a Crypt' (Shanty, Preacher) – 1:58
- 'Here Now' (Shanty) – 0:46
- 'I'll Always Be Here' (Mary Dee, Shanty) – 2:24
- 'Now's the Time to Tell Him' (Mary Dee, Shanty) – 2:21
- Movement IV – Father
- Andante Lamentoso – 2:59
- 'O Father, You Have Given...' (Chief Mourner) – 1:05
- '(Ah)' – 1:13
- 'Hey, Wait a Minute' (Shanty) – 1:44
- 'Father, Father, Father' (Shanty, Chief Mourner) – 4:12
Disc two
Side three
- Movement V – Wedding
- Andante Amoroso – 'I Know I Should Be Glad of This' (Shanty, Mary Dee) – 5:42
- 'Father, Hear Our Humble Voices' (Preacher) – 1:13
- 'Hosanna, Hosanna' (Mary Dee, Shanty) – 1:40
- Movement VI – Work
- Allegro Energico – 1:20
- 'Working Women at the Top' (Mary Dee) – 2:52
- Violin Solo – 5:05
- 'Did I Sign the Letter...' (Mary Dee) – 1:34
- Tempo I – 0:30
- 'When You Ask a Working Man' (Shanty, Mr. Dingle) – 1:34
- 'Let's Find Ourselves a Little Hostelry' (Mr. Dingle) – 2:04
Side four
- Movement VII – Crises
- Allegro Molto – 0:54
- 'The World You're Coming Into' (Mary Dee) – 2:28
- Tempo I – 0:45
- 'Where's My Dinner?' (Shanty, Mary Dee) – 2:40
- 'Let's Not Argue' (Shanty, Mary Dee) – 0:31
- 'I'm Not a Slave' (Mary Dee, Shanty) – 0:52
- 'Right! That's It!' (Mary Dee) – 0:49
- 'Stop. Wait.' – 2:03
- 'Do You Know Who You Are...' (Nurse) – 3:36
- 'Ghosts of the Past Left Behind' (Nurse, Shanty, Mary Dee) – 3:08
- 'Do We Live in a World...' (Mary Dee, Nurse, Shanty) – 3:18
- Movement VIII – Peace
- 'And So It Was That You Were Born' (Shanty) – 1:22
- 'God Is Good' – 1:26
- 'What People Want Is a Family Life' (Preacher) – 2:17
- 'Dad's in the Garden' (Nurse, Mary Dee, Preacher, Shanty) – 3:13
- 'So on and on the Story Goes' (Mary Dee, Shanty) – 1:06
Personnel
- Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra – orchestra
- Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Choir – chorus
- Liverpool Cathedral Choiristers – chorus
- Carl Davis – conductor
- Ian Tracey – conductor
- Kiri Te Kanawa – soprano: Mary Dee
- Jerry Hadley – tenor: Shanty
- Sally Burgess – mezzo-soprano: Miss Inkley, Chief Mourner, Nurse
- Willard White – bass: Headmaster, Preacher, Mr. Dingle
- Jeremy Budd – treble: Boy soloist
References
- ↑ Led Zeppelin: Achilles Last Stand, 1996 - 2015[usurped]
- ↑ Paul McCartney's Liverpool Oratorio at AllMusic
- ↑ Larkin, Colin (2006). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music (4th edn). New York, NY: Oxford University Press. p. 1257. ISBN 0-19-531373-9.
- ↑ Graff, Gary; Durchholz, Daniel (eds) (1999). MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide. Farmington Hills, MI: Visible Ink Press. p. 730. ISBN 1-57859-061-2.
- ↑ Randall, Mac; Brackett, Nathan; Hoard, Christian (eds) (2004). The New Rolling Stone Album Guide (4th edn). New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. p. 526. ISBN 0-7432-0169-8.
- ↑ Kozinn, Allan (29 June 1991). "Review/Music; A Crossover Dream Comes True in Liverpool: The Philharmonic Plays McCartney's Oratorio". The New York Times.
- ↑ New York Times Review
- ↑ The Guardian Review
- ↑ Gramophone review of recording