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Dunedin Consort, Soloists, John Butt - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Requiem, Reconstruction of First Performance (2014)

Posted By: Designol
Dunedin Consort, Soloists, John Butt - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Requiem, Reconstruction of First Performance (2014)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Requiem, Reconstruction of First Performance (2014)
Joanne Lunn, soprano; Rowan Hellier, alto; Thomas Hobbs, tenor; Matthew Brook, bass
Dunedin Consort, conducted by John Butt

EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 307 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 148 Mb | Artwork included
Classical, Choral | Label: Linn Records | # CKD 449 | Time: 01:01:39

Gramophone Classical Music Awards 2014 Choral category winner! Purely on grounds of performance alone, this is one of the finest Mozart Requiems of recent years. John Butt brings to Mozart the microscopic care and musicological acumen that have made his Bach and Handel recordings so thought-provoking and satisfying.

As with all of Butt’s recordings, however, this Mozart Requiem is something of an event. The occasion is the publication of a new edition – by David Black, a senior research fellow at Homerton College, Cambridge – of the ‘traditional’ completion of this tantalisingly unfinished work, of which this is the first recording. Süssmayr’s much-maligned filling-in of the Requiem torso has lately enjoyed a resurgence in its acceptance by the scholarly community – not that it has ever been supplanted in the hearts and repertoires of choral societies and music lovers around the world. The vogue for stripped-back and reimagined modern completions is on the wane and Süssmayr’s attempt, for all its perceived inconsistencies and inaccuracies, is once again in favour in the crucible of musicological criticism. After all, as Black points out in the preface to his score, ‘Whatever the shortcomings of Süssmayr’s completion, it is the only document that may transmit otherwise lost directions or written material from Mozart’.

Black has returned to the earliest sources of the work: Mozart’s incomplete ‘working’ score, Süssmayr’s ‘delivery’ score and the first printed edition of 1800, which even so soon after the work’s genesis was already manifesting accretions and errors that place us at a further remove from Mozart’s intentions. For all the textual emendations this engenders, the actual difference as far as the general listener is concerned is likely to be minimal; while we Requiemophiles quiver with delight at each clarified marking, to all intents and purposes what is presented here is the Mozart Requiem as it has been known and loved for more than two centuries.

It is Butt’s minute attention to these details, though, that makes this such a thrilling performance. He fields a choir and band of dimensions similar to the forces at the first performance of the complete work on January 2, 1793, little over a year after Mozart’s death, and the effect is, not unexpectedly, to wipe away the impression of a ‘thick, grey crust’ that was felt so palpably by earlier commentators on the work. Listen, for example, to Mozart’s miraculous counterpoint at ‘Te decet hymnus’ in the Introit or Süssmayr’s rather more clumsy imitation in the ‘Recordare’, and hear how refreshingly the air circulates around these potentially stifling textures.Butt’s outlook on the work is apparent from the very beginning: the gait of the string quavers is more deliberate than limping in the first bar, and this purposefulness returns in movements such as the ‘Recordare’ and ‘Hostias’. The extremes of monumentality and meditativeness in the Requiem are represented perhaps by Bernstein and Herreweghe respectively; Butt steers a course equidistant between the two without compromising the work in its many moments of austerity or repose. Paradoxically, Butt’s fidelity to the minutiae of the score allows him the freedom to shape a performance of remarkable cumulative intensity, so that the drama initiated in the driving ‘Dies irae’ reaches a climax and catharsis in the ‘Lacrimosa’ and is recalled in the turbulent Agnus Dei.

The choir is of only 16 voices, from which the four soloists step out as required. Blend and tuning are of an accuracy all too rarely heard, even in this golden age of British choral singing. Soprano Joanne Lunn’s tone is well nourished, with vibrato deployed judiciously to colour selected notes or phrases; of the other soloists, Matthew Brook’s bass responds sonorously to the sounding of the last trumpet (in German ‘die letzte Posaune’ – the last trombone) in the ‘Tuba mirum’. Instrumental sonority, too, is meticulously judged: hear especially the voicing of the brass-and-wind chords during bridge passages in the ‘Benedictus’ or the shifting orchestral perspectives of the ‘Confutatis’.

The couplings are also carefully considered. The first is Misericordias Domini, an offertory composed in 1775 of which Mozart had a set of parts copied in 1791. Sharing with the Requiem its key and a gleeful exploitation of contrapuntal techniques, it piquantly demonstrates the advance in Mozart’s church style during the last 16 years of his life.

The disc closes with what purports to be a re-enactment of an even earlier ‘first performance’ of the Requiem. While the 1793 Vienna concert is well documented, recent research has suggested that the Requiem (or at least some of it) was performed in a memorial to Mozart on December 10, 1791 – only five days after his death. Given the partial state of the work (only the Introit was complete in Mozart’s hand), it is supposed that this performance consisted of the Introit and the ensuing Kyrie fugue, for which an amanuensis filled in the doubling woodwind parts. That performance is hypothesised here with slimmed-down vocal and string parts, and with trumpets and drums missing from the Kyrie (on the presumption that the parts hadn’t been provided by that time). Starker still than the larger performance, this telling appendix offers a tantalising glimpse of the music that might have been played by Mozart’s friends and students as they struggled to come to terms with their loss.

Review by David Threasher, Gramophone

For all of the 19th century and most of the 20th, the commonly performed version of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's unfinished Requiem in D minor was the completion by Franz Xaver Süssmayr, Mozart's amanuensis. It was given its first public performance in January 1793, as part of a benefit concert to aid Constanze Mozart. Since the Requiem was published in 1800 by Breitkopf and Härtel (with some changes and no credit to Süssmayr), it has been revised to modify some of his clumsy counterpoint and orchestration, particularly in the Sanctus and Osanna. There have even been new editions with freshly composed movements and reworked orchestration that are arguably superior to Süssmayr's, suggesting what Mozart might have accomplished had he lived. Getting past all of this conjecture about an unfinished masterpiece is difficult for scholar and layperson alike, so John Butt and the Dunedin Consort have simply attempted a thorough reconstruction of the first performance, using Süssmayr's completion in the edition by David Black, and employing the number of singers and instrumentalists heard at the premiere. While there will never be a 100% authentic performance of the Requiem, this is at least an honest attempt to convey the intentions of Mozart and Süssmayr, for better or worse, without the interference of others. While this performance sounds close to period practice, with a small choir and a lean Classical orchestra, the music is refreshed but familiar, and both purists for period practice and adherents of modern style can find common ground here. Linn's hybrid SACD offers extraordinarily clear and spacious sound, and the sharpness of the playing comes across in the mix without any loss of the wonderful acoustic resonance.

Review by Blair Sanderson, Allmusic.com

Dunedin Consort, Soloists, John Butt - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Requiem, Reconstruction of First Performance (2014)



Dunedin Consort, Soloists, John Butt - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Requiem, Reconstruction of First Performance (2014)



Tracklist:

Requiem in D minor, K.626
Reconstruction of the first public performance, in the completion by
Franz Xaver Süssmayr, given at the Jahn-Saal, Vienna, 2 January 1793:

01. Requiem aeternam (04:28)
02. Kyrie (02:31)
03. Dies irae (01:49)
04. Tuba mirum (03:18)
05. Rex tremendae (01:57)
06. Recordare (04:51)
07. Confutatis (02:33)
08. Lacrimosa (03:02)
09. Domine Jesu (03:15)
10. Hostias (02:18)
11. Quam olim Abrahae (01:40)
12. Sanctus (01:34)
13. Benedictus (05:16)
14. Agnus Dei (02:55)
15. Lux aeterna (02:45)
16. Cum sanctis (02:44)

17. Misericordias Domini in D minor, K.222 - Offertorium de tempore (07:20)

18. Reconstruction of Requiem Performance 10.12.1791 - Requiem aeternam (04:29)

19. Reconstruction of Requiem Performance 10.12.1791 - Kyrie (02:46)


Exact Audio Copy V1.0 beta 3 from 29. August 2011

EAC extraction logfile from 21. March 2015, 19:17

Dunedin Consort , John Butt / Mozart - Requiem

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Test CRC E46C06CB
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==== Log checksum 9724149F6A8B37BB168530431B2094DAF1DBF8BC567A6C82F966F3EF39D6AB4C ====

foobar2000 1.2 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
log date: 2015-10-30 16:40:17

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Analyzed: Dunedin Consort , John Butt / Mozart - Requiem
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

DR Peak RMS Duration Track
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR10 -1.15 dB -16.12 dB 4:28 01-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Requiem aeternam
DR10 -0.94 dB -14.55 dB 2:32 02-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Kyrie
DR9 -0.47 dB -12.00 dB 1:49 03-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Dies irae
DR14 -3.20 dB -22.30 dB 3:19 04-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Tuba mirum
DR10 -0.92 dB -14.48 dB 1:57 05-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Rex tremendae
DR13 -1.06 dB -18.70 dB 4:51 06-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Recordare
DR12 -0.89 dB -18.28 dB 2:34 07-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Confutatis
DR10 -0.89 dB -15.84 dB 3:03 08-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Lacrimosa
DR12 -1.26 dB -16.56 dB 3:15 09-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Domine Jesu
DR11 -1.50 dB -16.94 dB 2:18 10-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Hostias
DR11 -1.49 dB -16.46 dB 1:40 11-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Quam olim Abrahae
DR8 -0.84 dB -12.08 dB 1:35 12-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Sanctus
DR13 -1.27 dB -18.25 dB 5:17 13-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Benedictus
DR10 -1.04 dB -16.86 dB 2:56 14-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Agnus Dei
DR10 -0.93 dB -15.92 dB 2:45 15-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Lux aeterna
DR10 -0.81 dB -14.93 dB 2:44 16-Requiem in D minor, K.626 - Cum sanctis
DR13 -1.48 dB -19.64 dB 7:20 17-Misericordias Domini in D minor, K.222 - Offertorium de tempore
DR12 -1.19 dB -17.77 dB 4:29 18-Reconstruction of Requiem Performance 10.12.1791 - Requiem aeternam
DR11 -1.30 dB -16.93 dB 2:46 19-Reconstruction of Requiem Performance 10.12.1791 - Kyrie
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Number of tracks: 19
Official DR value: DR11

Samplerate: 44100 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 16
Bitrate: 681 kbps
Codec: FLAC
================================================================================

Dunedin Consort, Soloists, John Butt - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Requiem, Reconstruction of First Performance (2014)

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