Messiah from the Three Choirs Festival, 2013

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  • edashtav
    Full Member
    • Jul 2012
    • 3671

    Messiah from the Three Choirs Festival, 2013

    Handel: Messiah

    Rosemary Joshua (soprano)
    Catherine Carby (mezzo-soprano)
    Nicholas Mulroy (tenor)
    Matthew Brook (bass)

    Cathedral Choirs of Gloucester, Hereford and Worcester
    The Dunedin Consort
    John Butt (conductor).

    recorded and broadcast on R.3 on the evening of Friday 13th September, 2013

    Why discuss this old 3 Choirs War-horse?

    Well, Messiah, once the back-bone and "must-do" piece of the Festival has fallen into desuetude, the victim of HIPP surgery that has delivered it into the hands of small choirs and places where they sing. This performance was carefully crafted by the conductor and musicologist John Butt. It was founded on an early edition ( Dublin - with star arias for the contralto, Catherine Carby, in all three parts), given an expert period band, the Dunedin Quartet and decked out by the 3 contributing Cathedral Choirs as opposed to the traditional wraparound Festival Chorus.

    Did it work for us, the listeners at home?

    I have to admit to being a casual listener, hearing the parts I & II of the oratorio whilst cooking a Duck Dinner.

    I gave the performance three out of four.

    I loved John Butt's interpretation : upbeat tempi; clean, clear textures; lively rhythms. Well-informed and thoroughly informing.
    I enjoyed the work of all the soloists: confident, clear diction, good lines,and sensitive ornamentation
    I felt that the Dunedin Consort was excellent; it wasn't an orchestra brought in "to do a job on one rehearsal" but a group that knew the score,and then characterised & projected it with love and attention to detail.

    But, the 4th partner, the 3 cathedral choirs I found lacking. Lacking in cohesion, with poor knowledge of performing practice, an in inability to maintain sprung rhythms in a mushy acoustic and generally just "doing a job" on a score they knew "backwards". If you didn't hear the performance listen to "His Yoke is Easy" just before the intelligent interval talk. Intonation was awful, unanimity was parlous and Handel's strong rhythms were diluted. Things were not that bad for many of the choruses but when the going got difficult, the choirs didn't rise to the challenge.

    Was the "problem" of scheduling Messiah within the constraints of the Three Choirs Festival solved?

    For me, it wasn't. But, I may be over-critical. Has hearing so many fully professional choir performances undermined by ability to appreciate anything less? Am I intolerant of the "smudging" caused by very resonant cathedral acoustics?

    I'd be interested in the views of other boarders.
    Last edited by edashtav; 14-09-13, 10:59. Reason: clarification and grammatical errors
  • Flosshilde
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 7988

    #2
    Rather a strange mash-up I would have thought. When I've heard the Dunedins do it the 'choir' was eight people, including the four soloists. How did the Dunedin Consort - a small group (but not quite as small as a quartet ) - balance with the rather larger forces of the combined cathedral choirs?

    Comment

    • edashtav
      Full Member
      • Jul 2012
      • 3671

      #3
      Originally posted by Flosshilde View Post
      Rather a strange mash-up I would have thought. When I've heard the Dunedins do it the 'choir' was eight people, including the four soloists. How did the Dunedin Consort - a small group (but not quite as small as a quartet ) - balance with the rather larger forces of the combined cathedral choirs?
      Well enough, on air - but microphones and engineers probably saw to that. Let's hope that we hear from those who were present.

      Comment

      • mercia
        Full Member
        • Nov 2010
        • 8920

        #4
        would have to agree the choir was the weak link, although several numbers started rather shakily which (I would have thought) could only be the conductor's fault (?).
        I didn't quite understand from what was said in the interview which edition we were hearing - I've never heard that version of But who may abide before, then we had just half the Pifa and a different How beautiful are the feet

        Comment

        • edashtav
          Full Member
          • Jul 2012
          • 3671

          #5
          Originally posted by Flosshilde View Post
          Rather a strange mash-up I would have thought. When I've heard the Dunedins do it the 'choir' was eight people, including the four soloists. How did the Dunedin Consort - a small group (but not quite as small as a quartet ) - balance with the rather larger forces of the combined cathedral choirs?
          Whoops - I've just noticed that I shrank the Consort to a Quartet. Did that make it a "broken consort", I wonder ? I'd better not edit my term or your comment will be wrecked!

          Comment

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