Leoš JANÁČEK (1854
- 1928)
Mša Glagolskaja (Glagolitic Mass) (original version 1926-1927)
[41:57]
Taras Bulba (1918) Rhapsody for orchestra [22:38]
Aga Mikolaj (soprano), Iris Vermillion (contralto), Stuart Neill (tenor),
Arutjun Kotchinian (bass); Iveta Apkalna (organ), Rundfunkchor Berlin,
Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin/Marek Janowski
rec. Haus des Rundfunks, RBB, Berlin and (organ solo), Philharmonie
Berlin, November 2010 and April 2012
Sung texts with English and German translations enclosed
PENTATONE CLASSICS PTC 5186 388
[64:35]
The first sketches for the Glagolitic Mass were made as early as
1907-1908 when Janáček began working on a mass for choir
and organ. He only completed the
Kyrie,
Agnus Dei and
parts of the
Credo. When he much later, in 1921, met the Archbishop
of Olomouc, Janáček complained about the bad quality of
church music, whereupon the prelate asked him to write something himself.
Then he immediately set to work and took out the mass sketches from
his drawers and used them as the basis for the new work. This mass
was to be sung in Old Church Slavonic, translated from the Latin mass
in the ninth century, the hand-writing known as the Cyrillic or Glagolitic
script, thus the title of this Mass. The inspiration came through
a thunderstorm, which was the germ out of which
Gloria developed.
The Mass then can be seen as ‘a hymn to creation, life and love’.
Between 2 and 17 August 1926 Janáček worked as in a trance
until the work was finished. Only the organ solo was created at a
later date. The premiere in Brno was not until 5 December 1927 before
which then he reworked it several times. Yet further revisions were
made before the Prague premiere in 1928. Were they all to the good?
Opinions are divided but in 1994 the score was reconstructed by Paul
Wingfield and that is the version used here. The organ solo is also
based on the original manuscript and the
Intrada is played
both at the beginning and the end of the work.
The mass is scored for soprano, alto, tenor, and bass soloists, double
SATB choir, and an orchestra of 4 flutes (2-4 doubling piccolos),
2 oboes, cor anglais, 3 clarinets (3rd doubling bass clarinet), 3
bassoons (3rd doubling contrabassoon), 4 horns, 4 trumpets, 3 trombones,
tuba, timpani, glockenspiel, triangle, snare drum, cymbals, tam-tam,
chimes, 2 harps, celesta, organ, and strings (violins I and II, violas,
cellos, and double basses). It is almost as extravagantly scored as
the
Sinfonietta - bar nearly a dozen extra trumpets in the
opening and closing movements - which is almost contemporaneous. Such
spectacular forces need a state-of-the-art recording, and that is
exactly what Pentatone has provided here. I have listened in traditional
2-channel stereo and it has amazing clarity and dynamic range. I suppose
the effect can be even greater through a multi-channel system.
The Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin - not to be confused with Deutsches
Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, formerly known as Radio-Symphonie-Orchester
Berlin - play excellently under their chief lifetime conductor Marek
Janowski. He may seem a bit too careful but there is true pesante
power in the
Intrada and the following
Úvod,
the latter with brass sonorities closely related to the
Sinfonietta.
Simon Rattle in his early digital recording (1981) is more youthfully
exuberant but then it should be kept in mind that Janáček
was an old man when he composed the Mass, about the age Janowski was
when he recorded it, so youthfulness
per se is not a necessary
ingredient. Moreover that EMI recording is beginning to show its age,
so technically Janowski wins hands down.
Janowski also has good soloists - at least three of them. Aga Mikolaj
is lyrical while Iris Vermillion is grandiose and Stuart Neill, who
started as a fairly lyrical tenor back in the 1990s has grown in strength
and is now a heroic singer of the highest order. Unfortunately Arutjun
Kotchinian is rather shaky but as a whole the solo singing is an asset
on this recording. So is the playing of organist Iveta Apkalna in
the postlude. It is one of the heftiest pieces in the organ literature
and with the life-like recording the listener is in for a stunning
experience.
Hefty is also a proper word for the symphonic poem - although Janáček
calls it plainly ‘Rhapsody for orchestra’ -
Taras Bulba.
It is based on a novel by Gogol and describes, in three movements,
episodes in the Cossack leader’s dramatic life. In the first
movement there is some hauntingly beautiful love music with excellently
played solos for English horn, violin and oboe. Basically this is
highly dramatic writing with spectacular battle music, where the brass
dominates - Janacek obviously loved trumpets and trombones. The end
of the work with brass, organ and ringing bells is truly thrilling.
As in the Mass the orchestra are on their toes, and even though Janowski’s
restraint shows through, I doubt that many listeners would be disappointed.
Charles Mackerras on Supraphon is probably the safest recommendation
in both works, though his Decca version of
Taras Bulba with
the Vienna Philharmonic is something special indeed. Rafael Kubelik’s
DG recording of the Mass is legendary, but the almost fifty-year-old
recording has to yield to more modern competitors.
Göran Forsling
See also review by Brian
Reinhart