EMI
Classics Today - Your Online Guide to Classical Music
Search Reviews
Discographies and Collections
Welcome
Classical World News
Concert Reviews and Features
Ad Index
Link to ArkivMusic.com

BERNSTEIN & BRITTEN
BENJAMIN BRITTEN
Rejoice in the Lamb
LEONARD BERNSTEIN
Chichester Psalms
STEPHEN PAULUS
Pilgrims' Hymn
EINOJUHANI RAUTAVAARA
Credo
Dale Warland Singers

Dale Warland

American Choral Catalog- 123(CD)
Reference Recording - Purcell Singers, Britten (Decca); The Sixteen (Collins); Camerata Singers, Bernstein (Sony)

rating

This recording from one of North America's premier professional choirs is a welcome addition to the choral catalog. From the thoughtful programming--worthy yet little-known pieces from several of today's best choral composers set between important works by Britten and Bernstein--to the agreeable sound and informative liner notes, this recording offers everything you'd expect from any excellent concert, without the coughing and crackling candy wrappers. Given its eccentricity, Benjamin Britten's cantata Rejoice in the Lamb has fared surprisingly well on recordings. But it's a uniquely charming eccentricity in which the music perfectly captures the imagery of the unconventional texts. Britten's own recording from 1957 (Decca), and more recent versions from Trinity College (Conifer) and the Sixteen (Collins) are most notable. This performance graces the field with its singable pace and technical polish; but it's slightly less effective in executing the textual inflections and rhythmic impulses. Bernstein's equally charming Chichester Psalms, cut from the same innovative mold and commissioned by the same Walter Hussey who commissioned Britten's cantata, are given solid, assured treatment--just the right combination of show-biz and reverence. However, most listeners will find the rest of the program--including beautiful mass movements by William Albright, Egil Hovland, and Rautavaara; a lovely "Pilgrim's Hymn" by Stephen Paulus; and a captivating Biblical drama by Aharon Harlap--to be the recording's real heart and soul. These works deserve to be widely heard, and it's here that the choir shines most brightly. Dale Warland does the right thing using soloists from the choir for most of the pieces--however, I'm not convinced that a mature male soprano (25-year-old Michael Maniaci) adds anything but novelty to the solos in the Britten and Bernstein.

--David Vernier



JOSEPH HAYDN
Stefan Vladar (piano)
Preiser

ALICIA DE LARROCHA--COMPLETE EMI RECORDINGS
Works by Soler, Granados, Albéniz, Turina, Montsalvatge, & Falla
Alicia de Larrocha (piano); Victoria de Los Angeles (soprano)
Orquestra Ciutat de Barcelona
Garcia Navarro
EMI

JOAQUIN TURINA
Lucia Duchonová (mezzo-soprano)
North German Radio Philharmonic
Celso Antunes
Hänssler Classic

AMILCARE PONCHIELLI
Ensemble Villa Musica
MDG

GEORGE GERSHWIN
LEONARD BERNSTEIN
Ingrid Jacoby (piano)
Russian National Orchestra
Dmitry Liss
Ondine


Search Reviews
ABOUT US ABOUT THE RATINGS WELCOME HOME

Review Digest

© 1999-2010 ClassicsToday.com. All rights reserved.