Berlioz Requiem CD review
BERLIOZ GRANDE MESSE DES MORTS
Tødenes / Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra & Choirs / Gardner (Chandos CHSA 5219) ***
NORMAN STINCHCOMBE MISSES BOMBAST IN BERLIOZ
A successful performance of Berlioz' Requiem Mass depends on getting the huge forces properly positioned in the right acoustic. In this live performance, recorded at the orchestra's Grieghallen home, they were – but as a recording for listening in hi-fi at home it doesn't work. The efforts of the splendid orchestra and conductor Edward Gardner, an adept at choral works, are vitiated by the production team who captured the acoustic space but not the work's in-your-face impact. The rocketing strings and thunderous timpani in the Dies irae, spine-tingling moments in Levine (DG) and Previn's (EMI) recordings, are muted here, even when the disc is played at very high volume. In the Sanctus tenor Bror Magnus Tødenes sounds about a mile away. The recording works best in the gentle and tender choral passages, the four choirs are excellent, but a Requiem without the audible grandeur, sublimity, and occasional bombast, isn't genuine Berlioz.
Norman Stinchcombe
Tødenes / Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra & Choirs / Gardner (Chandos CHSA 5219) ***
NORMAN STINCHCOMBE MISSES BOMBAST IN BERLIOZ
A successful performance of Berlioz' Requiem Mass depends on getting the huge forces properly positioned in the right acoustic. In this live performance, recorded at the orchestra's Grieghallen home, they were – but as a recording for listening in hi-fi at home it doesn't work. The efforts of the splendid orchestra and conductor Edward Gardner, an adept at choral works, are vitiated by the production team who captured the acoustic space but not the work's in-your-face impact. The rocketing strings and thunderous timpani in the Dies irae, spine-tingling moments in Levine (DG) and Previn's (EMI) recordings, are muted here, even when the disc is played at very high volume. In the Sanctus tenor Bror Magnus Tødenes sounds about a mile away. The recording works best in the gentle and tender choral passages, the four choirs are excellent, but a Requiem without the audible grandeur, sublimity, and occasional bombast, isn't genuine Berlioz.
Norman Stinchcombe