thanks JLW
Prom 67: Sunday 4th September at 7.00 p.m. (Beethoven's Missa Solemnis)
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Roehre
Originally posted by mercia View Postnot knowing the work very well, can anyone recommend a recording? I've just been looking at a random selection on Spotify and there's a wide variety of timings e.g. for the Kyrie, Gardiner/Monterverdi Choir take 8'50", Klemperer & NewPhil. take 9'26" whilst Harnoncourt/Concentus Musicus take 12'12"
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Anybody heard the 1987 Hanover Band, Oslo Cathedral Choir, cond Terjy Kvam, on Nimbus?
I used to own it but it got lost (with about another 30 CDs!) in a house move over 10 years ago.
Can't remember much about it except a good choir, good soloists, fairly brisk tempos but a very blurry recorded sound with not much orchestral detail.
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Roehre
Originally posted by aeolium View PostFor me, Bernstein and the Concertgebouw (1978, a DG recording of a live concert).
Its "original cast" would have included Gundula Janowitz, but Bernstein send her home after half an hour or so during the first rehearsal as she wasn't up to his standards (well, she had definitely not studied the score again, and her singing was horrible..)
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I was much impressed by the actual performance, but -I guess for that reason- I am a bit underwhelmed by the recording.
I didn't know that information about Janowitz. She had of course been a soloist in the Karajan recording with Wunderlich et al, so presumably she knew the score - was it just a matter of being underprepared or was she also unwell?
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Roehre
Originally posted by aeolium View PostThat's interesting, Roehre. Do you mean that the intensity of the live performance does not come across in the recording? It seems pretty powerful to me.
I didn't know that information about Janowitz. She had of course been a soloist in the Karajan recording with Wunderlich et al, so presumably she knew the score - was it just a matter of being underprepared or was she also unwell?
I agree that the recording is pretty powerful, but having heard it live something is lacking for me- despite the solists being great as is the Omroepkoor and the Concertgebouw orchestra playing its socks off. I don't know why.
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What is clear to me is that in a few short years (five?), we will no longer be hearing any performances such as Davis conjured on Sunday night. Forget HIP, the normal fabric of our choral traditions has been shifting for some time. Sure, we will have big forces arrayed such as for Elijah etc, but not grandly spacious, cirro-cumulative ones like this, to be meteorological for a moment. Why? No conductors around to impose or insist on this sort of vision of the great works. Also (more insidious) choirmasters who fear - or in some cases know - that their forces will be cruelly exposed by such an approach.
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cavatina
Is there any evidence that Beethoven was religious in any conventional sense?
Whatever the merits of Missa Solemnis as a whole, Colin Davis certainly brought out passages of great beauty and tenderness...I thought the violin solo in the Benedictus was particularly moving.
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Curalach
Originally posted by Prommer View PostWhat is clear to me is that in a few short years (five?), we will no longer be hearing any performances such as Davis conjured on Sunday night. Forget HIP, the normal fabric of our choral traditions has been shifting for some time. Sure, we will have big forces arrayed such as for Elijah etc, but not grandly spacious, cirro-cumulative ones like this, to be meteorological for a moment. Why? No conductors around to impose or insist on this sort of vision of the great works. Also (more insidious) choirmasters who fear - or in some cases know - that their forces will be cruelly exposed by such an approach.
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Originally posted by gradus View PostI too liked Davis's vision of a great work. It was splendid to hear a large choir, a sound that I grew up with and still enjoy. What a pity if Davis really is the only established conductor who performs great choral works with large amateur choirs. Let the People sing!
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