Polyphony

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Biography

Polyphony, in its regular context, is the art of combining individual musical voices into a texture resulting in harmony. Polyphony, the English chamber choir group, is led by Stephen Layton and was founded in 1986 for a single concert in King's College Chapel at Cambridge and has been going strong ever since. Recording exclusively for Hyperion and a regular, since 1995, at the BBC Proms concerts, Polyphony is highly regarded for its interpretations of the sacred choral music of contemporary composers, for example Arvo Pärt, John Rutter, John Tavener, James MacMillan, James Dillon, and others. In older literature, the group's annual performances of Handel's Messiah and Johann Sebastian Bach's St. John Passion are among the most anticipated events in the London music scene, and tickets for these events sell out months in advance. So popular is Polyphony in its native England that the group seldom needs to travel elsewhere, but the group has appeared in France, Spain, Brazil, Denmark, and Hungary. ~ Uncle Dave Lewis , Rovi

Discography

Grainger: Jungle Book

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At Twilight: Chorale Music By Percy Grainger And Edvard Grieg

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John Rutter: Requiem

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Cornelius: The Three Kings and Other Choral Music

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MacMillan: Seven Last Words from the Cross; Cantos Sagrados

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William Walton: Coronation Te Deum and other choral music

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O Magnum Misterium: Twentieth-Century Carols

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A Christmas Present from Polyphony

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John Tavener: Schuon Hymnen; The Second Coming; Exhortations and Kohima; Shûnya

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Morten Lauridsen: Lux aeterna

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