Hummel Missa Solemnis; Te Deum
A richly sung and played complement to the Gramophone Award-winning Masses
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Johann Nepomuk Hummel
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Naxos
Magazine Review Date: 5/2004
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 57
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: 8 557193

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Te Deum |
Johann Nepomuk Hummel, Composer
David Griffiths, Baritone Johann Nepomuk Hummel, Composer New Zealand Symphony Orchestra Patricia Wright, Soprano Patrick Power, Tenor TOWER Voices New Zealand Uwe Grodd, Conductor Zan McKendree-Wright, Contralto (Female alto) |
Missa Solemnis |
Johann Nepomuk Hummel, Composer
David Griffiths, Baritone Johann Nepomuk Hummel, Composer New Zealand Symphony Orchestra Patricia Wright, Soprano Patrick Power, Tenor TOWER Voices New Zealand Uwe Grodd, Conductor Zan McKendree-Wright, Contralto (Female alto) |
Author: Edward Greenfield
Richard Hickox’s splendid, Gramophone Award- winning Chandos issue of two of Hummel’s Masses (12/02) has already alerted us to the vigour and imagination of his choral writing, with none of the note-spinning that occasionally mars his keyboard writing. This, the longest of Hummel’s five Masses is another invigorating example, coupled with an electrifying setting of the Te Deum. Both were written in 1806 and feature martial reminders that this was the period of the Napoleonic Wars.
The Te Deum opens with a rousing march, and with one or two relaxed passages for contrast – illustrating this long and varied prayer-text – continues in a single span. It ends with a brisk and triumphant fugato, quite different from the sombre close most often heard in Anglican settings of Cranmer’s ‘Let me never be confounded’. But what a delight it is, the more so when Uwe Grodd draws such an exhilarating performance from his forces.
The performance of the Mass is equally successful. Unlike Haydn’s late Masses and the four other Masses which Hummel wrote for Prince Nicolas Esterhazy, this was not composed for the name-day of the Princess, but for the wedding of their daughter, Princess Leopoldina, an even grander occasion. The grandeur of the writing is established in the slow introduction to the Kyrie, leading to a brisk main Allegro (following Haydn’s lively practice in Kyries) in a rhythmic triple time.
The martial flavour of the writing is evident from the Gloria’s opening fanfares and continues into the Credo, until a sharp change of key to a warm A major brings a relaxed and lyrical setting of ‘Et incarnatus’, followed by the clashing discords of the ‘Crucifixus’. ‘Et resurrexit’ restores the military mood. One moment to relish comes after the last of the calls of ‘Credo’ on ‘Et vitam venturi’ (track 4, 9'09") with two rising scale passages clearly intended to send you up to Heaven in their exhilaration.
Brodd opts to use his (admirable) soloists throughout the Benedictus, even though the autograph suggests otherwise. It works very well with imitative writing for the soloists set against the four-square tread of the orchestra. With the Agnus Dei Hummel at last writes a meditative movement, slow and hushed, which develops into chromatic writing in a minor key, before the ‘Dona nobis pacem’, as in Haydn’s masses, brings a joyful close. Grodd inspires vigorous playing and singing from his forces, who are freshly and cleanly recorded.
The Te Deum opens with a rousing march, and with one or two relaxed passages for contrast – illustrating this long and varied prayer-text – continues in a single span. It ends with a brisk and triumphant fugato, quite different from the sombre close most often heard in Anglican settings of Cranmer’s ‘Let me never be confounded’. But what a delight it is, the more so when Uwe Grodd draws such an exhilarating performance from his forces.
The performance of the Mass is equally successful. Unlike Haydn’s late Masses and the four other Masses which Hummel wrote for Prince Nicolas Esterhazy, this was not composed for the name-day of the Princess, but for the wedding of their daughter, Princess Leopoldina, an even grander occasion. The grandeur of the writing is established in the slow introduction to the Kyrie, leading to a brisk main Allegro (following Haydn’s lively practice in Kyries) in a rhythmic triple time.
The martial flavour of the writing is evident from the Gloria’s opening fanfares and continues into the Credo, until a sharp change of key to a warm A major brings a relaxed and lyrical setting of ‘Et incarnatus’, followed by the clashing discords of the ‘Crucifixus’. ‘Et resurrexit’ restores the military mood. One moment to relish comes after the last of the calls of ‘Credo’ on ‘Et vitam venturi’ (track 4, 9'09") with two rising scale passages clearly intended to send you up to Heaven in their exhilaration.
Brodd opts to use his (admirable) soloists throughout the Benedictus, even though the autograph suggests otherwise. It works very well with imitative writing for the soloists set against the four-square tread of the orchestra. With the Agnus Dei Hummel at last writes a meditative movement, slow and hushed, which develops into chromatic writing in a minor key, before the ‘Dona nobis pacem’, as in Haydn’s masses, brings a joyful close. Grodd inspires vigorous playing and singing from his forces, who are freshly and cleanly recorded.
Discover the world's largest classical music catalogue with Presto Music.

Gramophone Digital Club
- Digital Edition
- Digital Archive
- Reviews Database
- Full website access
From £8.75 / month
Subscribe
Gramophone Full Club
- Print Edition
- Digital Edition
- Digital Archive
- Reviews Database
- Full website access
From £11.00 / month
Subscribe
If you are a library, university or other organisation that would be interested in an institutional subscription to Gramophone please click here for further information.