A unique work of lyrical beauty for SATB choir and double bass quartet, also playable with bass quartetet. The style is accessible and melodic, offering few challenges for any performer, but producing a work described as 'spellbinding' at its premiere. The rhythmic and driving bass lines contrast the more chordal and static choral writing.
The composer writes: "My Te Deum was composed in a response to a suggestion by David Heyes that I write something a little larger than the Suite which was my only previous work for double bass. Given the accompaniment, a grand and triumphant treatment of the text did not seem feasible, and the mood of much of the piece is quite sombre. Perhaps it takes its cue from the final section of the Te Deum: 'O Lord, save thy people...O Lord, have mercy upon us...' The voice parts are quite straightforward, and should not tax the average choir. For larger choirs, eight double basses might create a better balance than four."
Te Deum was premiered on 7 November 1998 at the Garrison Church (Aldershot, Hampshire) by Voci Cantanti, conducted by Andrew Phillips, with double bassists David Heyes, Lucy Heath, Anri Adachi and James Clark.
The double bass parts (RM075) are published separately.
Humphrey Clucas is particularly known for his choral music but has also written a number of impressive and accessible works for double bass in recent years.
Humphrey Clucas was born in 1941 and read English at King's College, Cambridge, where he was also a Choral Scholar. Having taught English for twenty-seven years he subsequently became a Lay Vicar at Westminster Abbey but is now retired.
As a composer he is self taught, and although he is well-known for a set of Anglican Responses written as an undergraduate, almost all his serious music has been written over the last twenty-five years. He has a growing reputation as a choral composer and has produced an impressive and steady stream of choral works, both sacred and secular, alongside much instrumental music. He has written works for Cathedrals in Chichester, Guildford, Salisbury and Winchester, as well as for King's College, Cambridge, Southwell Minster and Westminster Abbey.