The taste for Bruckner’s symphonies is by and 
        large considerably more widespread and easier to acquire than for his 
        Masses, which do not attract the same number of concert performances or 
        recordings. Indeed, a preference for the masses over the symphonies might 
        by some be accounted eccentric; nonetheless, there are over sixty recordings 
        in the discography of this, the biggest and greatest of Bruckner’s 
        Mass settings. Those generally accounted most successful and popular are 
        by Jochum, Barenboim and - for variety and individuality - Celibidache. 
        It is with these three recordings that this new release is compared. I 
        have also heard Helmuth Rilling’s 1992 account, but cannot in all 
        honesty consider it a worthy contender as it is so dull, small-scale and 
        poorly sung.  
        
        Although the Mass was not devised primarily for concert performance, there 
        is an emphasis upon musical rather than liturgical considerations with 
        several major consequences: the opening lines of the “Gloria” 
        and “Credo” are set to music sung by the whole choir rather 
        than being intoned by the tenor in the manner of a priest; the role of 
        the soloists is more prominent; and, finally, the musical idiom in general 
        is more symphonic - although the thematic material is still rooted in 
        Gregorian chant. Both the “Gloria” and the “Credo” 
        conclude with double fugues, their intricacy reflecting Bruckner’s 
        confidence in that form as he neared the end of his six years’ correspondence 
        course in harmony and counterpoint with Simon Sechter. Indeed, the Mass 
        was begun shortly after news reached Bruckner of Sechter’s death 
        in September 1867 but also marked Bruckner’s return to health following 
        his extended stay in the sanatorium at Bad Kreuzen, before his permanent 
        move to Vienna. 
          
        In this recording, Janowski uses Paul Hawkshaw’s 2005 edition of 
        the 1893 revision and in common with most conductors omits both the “vi-de” 
        bars 170-179 in the “Gloria” and the optional organ. His tempi 
        are moderate and thus, at 61:35, the duration of the performance lies 
        somewhere in between the extremes of Jochum (57:24) and Celibidache (76:16), 
        obviously somewhat nearer to the sprightlier than the monumental - although 
        there are recordings by such as Herreweghe which take as little as 52 
        minutes. 
          
        I cannot say that I find much which is remarkable or arresting about Janowski’s 
        interpretation, insofar as it is generally moderate and unhurried, in 
        well-balanced sound with adequate soloists. At no point do I find the 
        vertical sense of mystery and transcendence which I am sure Bruckner intended 
        and which, in the right hands such as those of Barenboim and Celibidache, 
        emerges so strikingly. 
          
        This is glorious, large-scale music and right from the start of the “Kyrie”, 
        both those conductors find a nobility in the phrasing of the descending 
        four-note figure in fourths passed from the strings to the choir to the 
        bass and finally the soprano soloists. The singers in both recordings 
        are superior to Janowski’s rather acidic soprano; Margaret Price, 
        Heather Harper and also Maria Stader for Jochum all soar angelically, 
        and there is a special, imposing distinction of timbre to the voices of 
        basses Marius Rinztler and Kim Borg which the rather lumpen Franz Josef 
        Selig cannot match. 
          
        The hallmark of Janowski’s style is essentially innocuous placidity; 
        even Jochum’s nervous, lively sensibility of the same kind which 
        characterises his accounts of Bruckner’s symphonies is a distinct 
        asset in comparison with Janowski’s steadiness. A typically effective 
        Jochum touch is the 
accelerando seven minutes into the “Kyrie”; 
        he finds a momentum here which eludes Janowski, although the latter builds 
        to an impressive climax and is greatly served by impeccable recorded sound, 
        whereas Celibidache’s live recording is good but plagued by coughs. 
        Jochum’s elderly DG version has been poorly re-mastered, suffering 
        from hiss, a distant choir and a generally muddy and muffled acoustic. 
        Celibidache’s tempi should drag but don’t, owing to his mastery 
        of the long line and nuanced control of dynamics; what he and Barenboim 
        do with the “Gloria” makes Janowski sound almost turgid. 
          
        The clarity of the recorded sound given to Janowski certainly constitutes 
        one of the greatest attractions of this new disc so it is a pity that 
        his flutes are recorded too prominently throughout, especially in the 
        “Sanctus”. Otherwise, Celibidache conjures an ethereal quality 
        here, his flutes spiralling upward, while Barenboim is warmer and impassioned; 
        Janowski simply plays it straight. 
          
        The “Benedictus” is among the most beautiful, Romantic and 
        indeed Mahlerian of Bruckner’s conceits; just as we may with some 
        certainty hear a link between the solo violin in the “Kyrie” 
        and the “Benedictus” of Beethoven’s “Missa solemnis”, 
        there is an unmistakable connection between the second melody, introduced 
        by the bass soloist and the Adagio of Mahler’s Fourth Symphony - 
        and perhaps the final movement of his Third, too. It is in this movement 
        that we most clearly hear the relative inadequacy of Janowski’s 
        soloists when the mezzo-soprano enters unsteadily, the soprano responds 
        shrilly, the bass wobbles, the tenor bleats and all four singers fail 
        to integrate their tone homogeneously. The quartets for Jochum, Barenboim 
        and Celibidache are markedly superior, although the playing and singing 
        of Janowski’s Rundfunkchor and Orchestre de la Suisse Romande are 
        distinctly impressive. 
          
        The final movement, the “Agnus Dei”, carries over the mood 
        of the “Benedictus”. The opening descending octave phrases 
        require affectionate moulding and delicately shaded dynamics of the kind 
        Janowski eschews; similarly he allows the semi-quavers three and a half 
        minutes in to plod and misses the effect of grandeur Bruckner intended. 
        However, the final tonic major two bar phrase for the oboe over pianissimo 
        strings and a grumbling kettledrum is very effectively managed. 
          
        Ultimately, other conductors have found more inspiration in their working 
        out of Bruckner’s classical forms and more variety in their phrasing 
        of his frequent quadruple rhythms. For me, Janowski’s more cautious, 
        non-interventionist approach fails to generate the requisite fervour and 
        intensity this music demands.   
        
        
Ralph Moore  
        
        Janowski’s more cautious, non-interventionist approach fails to 
        generate the requisite fervour and intensity this music demands.  
        
        
        See also review by 
Michael 
        Cookson