Period-instrument C minor Masses get better and better. The bar was
set in the mid 1980s by Gardiner and Hogwood, then raised in the new
millennium by the likes of McCreesh, Krivine and Langrée. This new
recording from Japan, which joins Suzuki’s scholarly and startling
Requiem, is fully worthy to join them. Reviewing the Requiem (1/15), I
was disappointed that the acoustic and engineering blurred the inner
voices, obliterating Mozart’s (or Süssmayr’s, Eybler’s or Suzuki Jnr’s)
counterpoint. Here that problem is largely avoided in a similarly grand
acoustic: that, and the fact that the C minor Mass is a far more vocally
orientated piece than the Requiem.
The choir are well drilled and the two female soloists are matched as
well as any on disc (see my Collection on the work, 6/13). Carolyn
Sampson takes the bulk of the soprano solos (the ‘Laudamus’ is taken by
the second soprano, Olivia Vermeulen, as is traditional) and does so
with the lithe coloratura, rich, silky tone and innate identification
with this music familiar from her sacred Mozart collection with The
King’s Consort (Hyperion, 5/06), and intertwines memorably with Olivia
Vermeulen in the duet and trio of the Gloria. Suzuki is no speed merchant (a full minute slower than Langrée in the Kyrie,
for example), and maintains the through line in more strenuous
movements such as the ‘Qui tollis’ and the ‘Cum Sancto Spiritu’ fugue
that closes the Gloria. He takes his time especially in the ‘Et incarnatus est’, its beautiful pastoral scene spun out mesmerisingly by Sampson.
The edition used of this tantalisingly incomplete work is that
by Franz Beyer, published in 1989. There is nothing here to
discombobulate the general listener; however, those for whom such
matters are important will wish to know that there are no (editorial)
trumpets in the ‘Credo’ or horns in the ‘Incarnatus’, whose new string
parts are perhaps more active than those in the more usual HC Robbins
Landon completion. (Beyer also contrived an Agnus Dei from the music of the Kyrie
but that is not recorded here.) As the only other recording of this
edition is Harnoncourt’s, whose peculiar balance between voices and
instruments is a sticking point, it is worthwhile to hear Beyer’s work
on this disc.
Sampson is once again the soloist in the popular Exsultate, jubilate,
the treat here being a parallel recording of the opening aria in the
‘Salzburg’ version, which boasts a different text and flutes instead of
oboes. As a package, the disc as a whole is certainly a winner; the Mass
easily ranks alongside the period-instrument benchmarks. (David Threasher / Gramophone)
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