5 Jun 2011

Hector Berlioz - Requiem; Symphonie funèbre et triomphale - Colin Davis




















Buy
Colin Davis , London Symphony Orchestra , Ronald Dowd 

      CD1:
  1. I. Requiem Kyrie
  2. II. a Dies Irae
  3. II. b Tuba mirum
  4. III. Quid sum miser
  5. IV. Rex Tremendae
  6. V. Quaerens me
  7. VI. Lacrymosa
  8. VII. Domine Jesu Christe
  9. VIII. Hostias
      CD2:
  1. IX. Sanctus
  2. X. Agnus Dei
  3. I. Marche funebre
  4. II. Oraison funebre
  5. III. Apotheose
Emphatically not an issue for the 'small is beautiful' lobby, but one likely to be seized on eagerly by all CD-owning lovers of Berlioz at his most monumental. They may already have the corresponding LPs, but these colossal works benefit enormously from the extra clarity and aural spaciousness of the new format. So far as the Symphonie funebre et triomphale (written to commemorate the dead of the 1830 Revolution) is concerned, Davis has the field to himself. I clearly remember the first occasion, years ago, on which the BBC mounted a public performance of this work: the sonority of the huge wind-band (including, apparently, every clarinettist in the Home Counties) was so massive that the orchestral strings' vigorous bow-strokes were totally inaudible, and the chorus imported for the peroration might just as well have been so many goldfish. Nothing of the sort here: the Philips engineers have done splendidly in securing definition and a satisfying balance of forces throughout, aiding the impressive breadth of Davis's interpretation. The solemn sweep of his funeral march, with its thunderous irruptions, and the grandiose brass chords introducing the solo trombone's oration, are indeed (as was Berlioz's intention, stated in his Memoirs) ''awe-inspiring''.
For the Requiem an alternative recording exists, and here some careful weighing-up of the choices is needed. Robert Shaw has the advantage of a superior, and apparently larger, chorus—one, moreover, that is not allowed to sing ''dona-reis''—with a conspicuously more assured male section; but comparison of the a capella ''Quaerens me'' reveals that under Davis's direction there is much more 'meaningful' singing; the fugue of his Hosanna, too, has more character. On the other hand, Shaw's tenor John Aler is more French in style and more at ease in the high tessitura of the Sanctus than Ronald Dowd, whose B flats are too effortful. In reviewing the Telarc issue I spoke of its stunning recording of the great climaxes, and a re-hearing only confirms their sensational impact; but the Philips version is not far behind at cataclysmic moments, and Davis makes more of Berlioz's coups de theatre such as the shattering B flat chord near the end of the Lacrymosa. In fact, throughout the Requiem Davis's intensity, sense of drama and insight into detail constantly make points that Shaw underplays: so the coupling of these two works makes this a particularly attractive proposition.
-- Lionel Salter, Gramophone [4/1986]

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6 comments:

bcow said...

Steve, thanks for posting this, but both links are the same.

Steve said...

Download link CD1:

https://rapidshare.com/files/458076730/Ber.Req.C1.rar

Download link CD2:

https://rapidshare.com/files/3653335608/Ber.Req.C2.rar

Steve said...

Thanks for spotting that bcow, links are fixed now.

Marie-Thérèse said...

Followed you over here from Meeting in Music. Always nice to find a brand spanking new classical music blog and starting with Berlioz, one of my favourite composers, is auspicious! I look forward to seeing what you post in future.

Anonymous said...

I recall this as a stunning performance on vinyl. Good luck to your new blog. I'll be popping by regularly. Thank you

gblid100

Ice said...

Welcome to the blogsphere Steve. It's great to see new blogs offering classical music. I wish you all the best to you and to your blog.