Artist's albums
Lead, Kindly Light
2021 · single
A Banquet of Voices
2020 · album
Stanford & Howells Remembered
2020 · album
John Rutter: Visions & Requiem
2016 · album
Rutter: The Gift of Life
2015 · album
The Gift of Life: No. 2, The Tree of Life - Single
2015 · single
Christmas Star: A Christmas Festival
2013 · album
O Praise the Lord of Heaven
2013 · album
A Song in Season
2012 · album
This Is the Day: Music on Royal Occasions
2012 · album
This is the Day: Music on Royal Occasions
2012 · album
Candlelight: Seasonal Reflections & Celebrations
2011 · album
Faure: Requiem - Messe basse
2010 · album
Fauré: Requiem & Other Sacred Music
2010 · album
The Sacred Flame
2009 · album
A Christmas Festival
2008 · album
Handel: Messiah, HWV 56
2007 · album
Lighten Our Darkness: Music for the Close of Day
2006 · album
Rutter: Fancies
2005 · album
Gloria - The Sacred Music Of John Rutter
2005 · album
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Biography
Britain's Cambridge Singers, prolific and commercially successful, are among the best-known choral ensembles of the contemporary era. They were founded by composer John Rutter primarily as a vehicle for recording his music, although the group has also performed other music. Rutter established the Cambridge Singers in 1981, drawing on the membership of the Clare College Choir at Cambridge University, where he had been the director from 1975 to 1979. He augmented this core with other singers who had been choral scholars at major British universities. Although the Cambridge Singers have given live performances, Rutter intended them as a recording ensemble, and he formed Collegium Records in 1984 as a vehicle for recordings of the group. At the time, small independent labels devoted to choral music were still fairly rare. The debut Cambridge Singers recording, featuring Fauré's Requiem, was a critical success. Also in 1984, Rutter and the Cambridge Singers issued Gloria: The Sacred Music of John Rutter (reissued in 2005), and as Rutter's popularity grew, with choral music at the center of his output, it was the Cambridge Singers who were heard on the recordings that made him internationally famous. The group has spawned several impressive solo vocal careers, including those of tenor Mark Padmore and baritone Gerald Finley. The Cambridge Singers have recorded various works not by Rutter, both with Rutter and with others as conductor; in 2016 they were heard on a Royal Philharmonic Orchestra recording of Gustav Holst's The Planets, conducted by Owain Arwel Hughes. They have even crossed into the pop sphere with appearances on several albums by the electronic ensemble Mannheim Steamroller. The Cambridge Singers have been extremely prolific, often releasing two or three albums per year in the 1990s and 2000s decades. They also released a new recording of Rutter's Requiem, paired with a new work, Visions, in 2016.