MOZART Requiem
Two dramatic Requiems but one that finds more probing truths
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Genre:
Vocal
Label: Alpha
Magazine Review Date: 08/2011
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 46
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: ALPHA178
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Requiem |
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer
Arnaud Richard, Bass Markus Brutscher, Tenor MusicAeterna New Siberian Singers Simone Kermes, Soprano Stephanie Houtzeel, Alto Teodor Currentzis, Conductor Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer |
Composer or Director: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Genre:
Vocal
Label: ABC Classics
Magazine Review Date: 08/2011
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 68
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: ABC476 4064
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Requiem |
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer
Antony Walker, Conductor Cantillation Orchestra of the Antipodes Paul McMahon, Tenor Sally-Anne Russell, Mezzo soprano Sara Macliver, Soprano Teddy Tahu Rhodes, Bass-baritone Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer |
Author: David Threasher
The Australian performance by and large takes a traditional path, allowing the work to unfold naturally and without exaggeration. In the slightly wiry sound of the gut strings and the pure-toned soprano in the Introit, I was reminded to a certain extent of Hogwood’s recording with Emma Kirkby (using the Maunder edition: L’Oiseau-Lyre, 11/84R). The other soloists are fine – special mention must go to the stentorian Teddy Tahu Rhodes as he calls forth the last trumpet in the “Tuba mirum” – and they blend well. The “Rex tremendae” adopts a tempo appropriate to the King of awful majesty without going to Bernstein’s extreme (Beyer edition: DG, 10/89). Only the fugues seem somewhat dutiful and under-characterised; a continuo organ is prominent throughout. Teodor Currentzis and his Novosibirsk forces take a different tack. Blazing trumpets, explosive timpani (in the Sanctus, for example) and sudden fortes extract the maximum drama from the music and the click of bows on strings might even be overdone in fast music. While the “Rex tremendae” is taken at the jig tempo so often preferred these days, the “Confutatis” and “Hostias” are played Andante as marked, and are none the worse for it, and the Agnus Dei is slower than usual so that its quavers are equal to those of the reprise of the Introit music. The plaintive sotto voce of the upper voices and the urgent but exhausted chromatic gropings of the closing section of the “Confutatis” are most moving.
What some might not find so persuasive is the stripping-down of the opening eight bars of the “Lacrimosa” to voices and bass (these were the last notes Mozart wrote); as Süssmayr’s completion of the movement draws to a close, bells cover the transition to the exposition of the “Amen” fugue, sketched in very rough form by Mozart. (Maunder, Druce, Levin et al offer putative completions of the fugue.) It’s ear-catching and strangely effective; in the context of a much-loved sacred work, others may not be so convinced.
Both recordings realise the Requiem as a work of inward and outward drama, composed in a tumultuous time by the supreme musical dramatist of his age. For those who require a period-instrument performance that allows its drama to unfold from within the music, Walker will not disappoint. Currentzis, on the other hand, draws back the curtain on the theatre of death and mourning, of fear and consolation, in a way that is not easily forgotten.
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