This is the third collaboration on disc between 
          the Gabrieli Consort and Players and the members of the Wrocław 
          Philharmonic Choir, the unifying force being Paul McCreesh. It follows 
          their outstanding recordings of the Berlioz 
Grand Messe des Morts 
          (
review) 
          and Mendelssohn’s 
Elijah (
review). 
          Those two recordings were distinguished not only on account of the excellent 
          musical performances but also through the scrupulous research undertaken 
          by McCreesh and his colleagues to use instrumental forces that gave 
          a good idea of the sounds that would have been heard by contemporary 
          audiences. Here, by contrast, they turn their attentions to a work that 
          was first heard just fifty-one years ago. 
            
          There are some works that people are wont to say are ‘lucky’ 
          on record. I’m not sure how much luck comes into it; I suspect 
          it’s more a case that certain works inspire the performers to 
          give something special and 
War Requiem comes into that category. 
          The catalogue already contains several very fine recordings. Britten’s 
          own is 
hors concours, especially in its most recent incarnation 
          which includes, as an invaluable appendix, substantial rehearsal extracts 
          (
review). 
          The 
MusicWeb 
          Britten discography lists a further 19 recordings - to which must 
          now be added this newcomer - among which I’d particularly single 
          out those by Giulini with Britten (BBC Legends), Hickox (Chandos), Andris 
          Nelsons (
review), 
          Gianandrea Noseda (
review) 
          and Rattle (
review). 
          The live 1967 performance conducted by Ansermet is also well worth hearing, 
          not least because among the soloists are Heather Harper, much earlier 
          in her career than when she recorded the work with Hickox, and the late 
          Thomas Hemsley, who never took part in a studio recording (
review). 
          
            
          So this newcomer enters a distinguished field. One element that marks 
          it out immediately is the contribution of Christopher Maltman who gives 
          one of the best, most nuanced performances of the baritone solo role 
          that I’ve ever heard. It’s surely no accident that Maltman 
          has a fine reputation as an interpreter of art song; his talents in 
          that field are much in evidence here. He catches the pathos and melancholy 
          of ‘Bugles sang’ marvellously, deploying a fine and easy 
          legato in a most expressive rendition of this part of the score. That’s 
          an intimate piece but he’s just as successful in the more histrionic 
          ‘Be slowly lifted up …’ which he sings with great 
          power and authority. In ‘After the blast of lightning’ he 
          really captures the listener’s attention with some expertly controlled 
          quiet singing while in his half of ‘Strange meeting’ he 
          makes use of a telling range of vocal colouring in a tremendous performance. 
          He’s also a fine partner for John Mark Ainsley in their two duets: 
          the re-telling of the story of Abraham and Isaac is very well done while 
          ‘Out there’ conveys excellently the sardonic bite of Britten’s 
          setting. 
            
          Ainsley is a highly experienced Britten singer and it shows. His is 
          a fine reading of the tenor part although I fear I’ve been rather 
          spoiled by the performances of Ian Bostridge (Noseda) and Mark Padmore 
          (Nelsons). Ainsley has a different vocal timbre to these two singers; 
          he doesn’t have the same plangency and edge in his voice but, 
          like them, he sings with much intelligence and with feeling. He’s 
          very expressive in ‘Move him into the sun’ and shows - as 
          he does throughout the work - great care for the words in the tenor 
          solo in the Agnus Dei: Padmore, however, is unforgettable here, especially 
          in the poignant final rising phrase. At the start of ‘Strange 
          meeting’ I look for a vocal timbre that’s more drained of 
          colour than Ainsley offers but his is by no means a negligible account 
          of this gaunt music. He brings a great deal to the tenor part overall. 
          
            
          The third soloist is Susan Gritton. She is suitably imperious at ‘Liber 
          scriptus’, bringing to this passage the vocal power than I missed 
          in the singing of Erin Wall on the Nelsons DVD. She’s equally 
          imposing at the start of the Sanctus while in the Benedictus she offers 
          some excellent gentle singing and she makes a fine contribution to the 
          closing ensemble. Throughout, her singing evidences great commitment 
          and this is one of the best things I’ve heard her do, either live 
          or on disc. 
            
          The substantial choir comprises the professional singers of the Gabrieli 
          Consort, Polish singers from Wrocław and a goodly contingent from 
          the estimable Gabrieli Young Singers Scheme. Splendid choral singing 
          has been a notable feature of McCreesh’s Berlioz and Mendelssohn 
          recordings and it’s just as evident here. I was impressed with 
          the clarity in passages such as ‘Tuba mirum’ and in the 
          first, loud rendition of the ‘Quam olim Abrahae’ fugue, 
          in which there’s excellent definition; the soft reprise of that 
          material is also well done though I have heard it delivered even more 
          quietly - by the CBSO Chorus for Nelsons, for instance. The ‘Pleni 
          sunt caeli’ section of the Sanctus is done as well as I’ve 
          ever heard it. The sound grows from nothing to a clamorous tumult - 
          McCreesh builds it superbly, his singers totally responsive - and then 
          the ‘Hosanna’, resplendent with braying horns, is thrilling. 
          
            
          In addition to the main chorus there’s a crucial part for a small 
          choir of trebles. The Choristers of New College, Oxford are confident 
          and completely accurate, as you’d expect. The one reservation 
          I have is that their sound strikes me as just a little too cultivated 
          - I’d have liked more edge to the tone - but that’s a subjective 
          matter. They were recorded separately from the main ensemble, it seems, 
          which I’m not sure often happens. However, the boys are supposed 
          to be placed at a distance from the other performers so the separate 
          recording isn’t an issue in practice. Incidentally, we learn from 
          the booklet that the New College choir’s long-serving Director 
          of Music, Edward Higginbottom, turned the pages for the organist - his 
          organ teacher - at the first performance of 
War Requiem. 
            
          The instrumental playing is superb. The hand-picked chamber orchestra, 
          which includes the members of the excellent Carducci String Quartet 
          in its ranks, offers razor-sharp playing which does full justice to 
          the piquant accompaniments that Britten provided for the male soloists 
          - though ‘accompaniment’ is the wrong word; these are richly 
          illustrative commentaries on the poems in their own right. The one very 
          minor disappointment is that the timpani are not as forceful as I would 
          like right at the start of ‘Be slowly lifted up …’ 
          The main orchestra is just as proficient in every department and though 
          it may be invidious to do any singling out the contributions of the 
          brass and percussion are unfailingly thrilling. The decision to dub 
          in the Birmingham Town Hall organ - as on McCreesh’s 
Elijah 
          recording - is vindicated above all by the impact it makes at the apocalyptic 
          climax in the last movement that precedes ‘Strange meeting’. 
          In the booklet Angus Smith, one of the tenors in the choir, describes 
          this terrifying climax (at 6:27) as “a ‘mushroom cloud’ 
          moment”. What a telling phrase and it’s borne out in this 
          performance. 
            
          Paul McCreesh yet again shows himself to have full command of very large 
          forces. He clearly has the measure of the work and if one didn’t 
          know just from listening to the performance it’s evident from 
          his comments in the booklet that he feels this score deeply. His control 
          is especially impressive - the whole of the Sanctus evidences that as 
          does his building up of the ‘Libera me’ from its hushed, 
          menacing beginning to the aforementioned climax. The way he shapes and 
          steers the long final ensemble in which, at last, all the forces are 
          united, is deeply impressive. Earlier, and on a much smaller scale, 
          his direction of the passages involving the male soloists and the chamber 
          orchestra is, according to need, incisive or poetic - and often both. 
          
            
          Essentially the same recording team has worked on this recording and 
          on McCreesh’s two preceding large-scale choral recordings and 
          once again they have produced superb results. There’s great clarity, 
          even in the most fully scored passages, and the sound has a genuine 
          presence. The big climaxes really pack a punch but the many quiet passages 
          are equally well served by the engineers. As is usual with these Winged 
          Lion/Signum recordings the presentation is first class. The discs are 
          housed in a hardback book-style case and the comprehensive documentation 
          includes very good notes and several short personal reflections on 
War 
          Requiem, including several by people who were involved in the first 
          performance in Coventry Cathedral. There is also a large number of highly 
          evocative and discerningly selected black and white photographs. Incidentally 
          English-speaking collectors should not overlook the Polish section of 
          the booklet because the photographs are different there. The only disappointment 
          is that each movement is contained in one single track. Among the versions 
          I have in my collection only those conducted by Hickox and by Jaap van 
          Zweden (
review) 
          are presented in this way. All the others offer a number of tracks within 
          each movement, with each Owen setting separately tracked. That seems 
          infinitely preferable to me. 
            
          This is a very worthy contribution to the Britten centenary celebrations 
          and it’s also a notable addition to the discography of 
War 
          Requiem. As I said at the outset, there are several very fine recordings 
          of the work in the catalogue and all those that I’ve heard offer 
          much to the listener. Britten’s own recording is a mandatory purchase 
          and I also think that the Andris Nelsons DVD is a very special experience 
          - and not just for those who, like myself, were privileged to be in 
          Coventry Cathedral for that 50
th anniversary performance. 
          However, if you want an audio recording to complement Britten’s 
          performance then this new McCreesh performance has a great deal to commend 
          it.  
            
          One final thought. I see from the booklet that Paul McCreesh stepped 
          down as Artistic Director of the Wratislavia Cantans Festival last year 
          after a six-year stint. The very fruitful Anglo-Polish collaboration 
          that he spearheaded during that time has already brought us three splendid 
          large-scale choral/orchestral recordings. I do hope that this recording 
          of 
War Requiem won’t be the last from this source and that 
          the collaboration will continue. 
            
          
John Quinn 
            
          A notable addition to the discography of 
War Requiem in Britten 
          centenary year.  
          
          Britten discography & review index: 
War 
          requiem