Magnificats to treasure
Craig M. Zeichner | Brooklyn, NY | 01/08/2010
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Johann Sebastian Bach had no greater acolyte than Felix Mendelssohn. Everybody knows the story of Mendelssohn's great love and respect for Bach's music and his revival of the Saint Matthew Passion in 1829, so this coupling of Bach's Magnificat and an 1822 setting by Mendelssohn is nicely conceived. Mendelssohn's Grave and Fuga for strings and a fantastic 1830 of the Ave Maria round out the program.
What can be said about Bach's Magnificat? It's the most famous setting of the canticle in the choral repertoire and it's been recorded hundreds of times before. I was taken with the energy and precision of this performance led by Simon Carrington. Carrington is one of the wonders of the choral world, a teacher, singer and conductor of the highest order and the Yale Schola Cantorum is fantastic. If you have choral radar you will know that Carrington founded the group in 2003 (when he was running the Yale Institute of Sacred Music) to sing early music and contemporary works. The ensemble has recorded brilliant records of Biber's Vesperae longiores ac breviores, Bertali's Missa Resurrectionis and J.S. Bach's St. John Passion in the 1725 version - all are sublime. Carrington has moved on--Masaaki Suzuki of the Bach Collegium Japan now runs the show--but this recording is a marvelous tribute to how skilled a Carrington-led choir can be. It's a really top-notch Magnificat performance.
As good as the Bach is, it's the Mendelssohn that's going to sell the recording. Mendelssohn sampled some ideas from J.S. and C.P.E. Bach's Magnificats as well as dipping into an instrumental palette that tastes Baroque--check out the high trumpets in the opening chorus. There's much to love here. The Fecit potentiam is a Bach-styled bravura aria for bass, brass and timpani that all but stops the show. The Deposuit potentes, a florid trio for soprano, alto and bass with some lovely support from the winds is outstanding. Perhaps most memorable is the gorgeous setting of the Quia respexit for soprano, viola, bassoon and chorus that is stunning. The Ave Maria is another terrific find. Carrington opts for the work's original scoring for chorus, winds and brass and it showcases the rich sound of the excellent choir.
"
2 Magnificats
Dorothy Hancock | Janesville, WI, USA | 12/24/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)
"I recently sang these Magnificats in a concert by the local Choral Union. These are very good recordings and perfect for practising, all on one disc"
Bach's and the 13-year-old Mendelssohn's Magnificats
J Scott Morrison | Middlebury VT, USA | 11/01/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)
"The most amazing thing on this disc of two works on the text of the Song of Mary ('Magnificat anima mea Dominum' ['My soul magnifies the Lord']) is the first of Mendelssohn's Magnificat settings, written when he was thirteen. (He wrote, late in his too-short life, another Magnificat, Op. 69, No. 3.) This early work is his first large work for chorus, orchestra and soloists and is filled with magnificent contrapuntal and dramatic moments. It is in six movements and includes, among others, a virtuoso movement for basso, 'Fecit potentiam' ['He has shown strength'] sung magnificently here by David Dong-Geun Kim. The concluding Gloria Patri fugue is sung and played brilliantly by the Yale Schola Cantorum and the accompanying Yale Collegium Players. Music by Mendelssohn on the disc also includes the Fugue from his Twelfth String Symphony in G Minor, written less than a year after the Magnificat and also his Kirchenmusiken ('Church Music'), the latter sung by tenor Birger Radde and the eight-singer (pun alert!) Yale Voxtet.
The CD is rounded out with a stirring performance of the thrice-familiar D Major Magnificat by Johann Sebastian Bach. All of these works are directed by Simon Carrington, known primarily as one of the founders of the fabled King's Singers and for the past several years a professor at Yale University, where he founded the Yale Schola Cantorum. Assisting Carrington in preparation of this CD are Robert Mealy, editor of the String Symphony fugue, superb baroque violinist, and leader/concertmaster of the original-instruments Yale Collegium Musicum, and the well-known oratorio tenor James Taylor, artistic director of the Yale Voxtet. Taylor is best-known for his association with Helmut Rilling on whose Bach Cantata recordings he made frequent appearances.
This disc, aside from containing excellent performances at budget price, is interesting for showing how the compositional style of the young Mendelssohn was influenced strongly by Bach, whose music he later effectively fostered after nearly a century of relative neglect.
Scott Morrison"