Vallentyn Sylvestrov. Sacred Works
- Release: Kyiv Choir Productions
- Released: 2009
- Sound Engineer: Andrij Mokytskij
- Cover: Reptoduction by Yurij Chymych "Vydubychi Monastery" (Gouache, 1972)
БОГОРОДИЦЕ ДІВО
Valentyn Sylvestrov
Songs for Vespers (2006) 24:23
- Come, let us worship
- World of peace
- Holy God
- O Virgin Mother of God
- Today You release (your servant)
- Many years (Vivat)
- Silent Night
Psalms and Prayers (2007) 20:38
- Praise God all ye nations (ps.116)
- Lord, my heart swells not with pride (ps.130)
- Lord Jesus Christ
- Blessed is he (ps.1)
- O King of Heaven
- With the saints grant eternal peace
- Our Father
Two Psalms of David (2007) 8:54
- To You, O Lord, I call (ps.27)
- The Lord is my Shepherd (ps.22)
Two spiritual refrains (2007) 7:14
- Do not forsake me
- Alleluia
Two spiritual songs (2007) 5:46
- Cherubic Hymn
- Many years (Vivat)
Three spiritual songs (2006) 7:51
- Cherubic Hymn
- Many years (Vivat)
- Alleluia
Total playing time: 75:07
About the album
Valentin Silvestrov with recordings of his orchestral, chamber and vocal works – creations that stand as some of the most arresting and moving in contemporary music. This continues in Silvestrov’s 75th birthday year with Sacred Songs, the seventh album ECM has devoted wholly to the composer’s music; it collects sets of songs, refrains, psalms and prayers composed from 2006 to 2008 that reflect the composer’s late-blooming interest in writing for a cappella voices, which led previously to the ECM releases Requiem for Larissa and Sacred Works. Like the latter album, Sacred Songs features the utterly attuned, even otherworldly performances of Ukraine’s Kiev Chamber Choir under the direction of co-founder Mykola Hobdych, with the recordings made in the resounding air of St. Michael’s Golden-Domed Monastery, an ancient building recently reconstructed, the acoustic of which is almost a joint performer with the choir. The BBC description of Sacred Works just as easily fits the new Sacred Songs: “A ravishing collection of a cappella choral works by Silvestrov that perfectly illustrates his own description of his music as ‘a response to and an echo of what already exists’. It is the sheer beauty of sound that catches the ear (…) luminous and lyrical.”