Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827)
            Missa Solemnis in D major, Op. 123
            Helen Donath (soprano); Doris Soffel (mezzo); Siegfried Jerusalem 
            (tenor); Hans Sotin (bass)
            Edinburgh Festival Chorus
            London Philharmonic Orchestra/Sir Georg Solti.
            rec. live, 10 September 1982, Royal Albert Hall, London. ADD
            Latin text and English translation included
            
LONDON PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA LPO-0077 [79:33]
            
            
 Sir Georg Solti was Principal Conductor and 
              Artistic Director of the London Philharmonic Orchestra for four 
              seasons (1979-1983). This Beethoven concert, given at the Proms, 
              came at the start of the LPO’s 1982/83 season, which was the 
              orchestra’s Golden Jubilee and Solti’s last in charge.
               
              Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis is a colossal challenge 
              to all the performers, not least the choir. Solti’s is an 
              intense, big-boned reading which seems to me to be firmly operatic 
              in conception - more than once while listening von Bülow’s 
              celebrated waspish quip about the Verdi Requiem being the composer’s 
              opera in vestments came to mind.
               
              The operatic dimension is very much in evidence in the contributions 
              of the four soloists. All of them have large voices – vital 
              in a hall the size of the Royal Albert Hall – and all of them 
              give strongly projected performances. I prefer the higher voices 
              in the quartet. Hans Sotin sounds somewhat strained at times and 
              there’s a touch of the lugubrious about some of his singing. 
              At the start of the Agnus Dei I have the impression he 
              doesn’t want to sing at Solti’s tempo. Overall, however, 
              he’s solid and reliable. The timbre of Doris Soffel’s 
              voice is not to my taste; the tone often appears to be hard. Like 
              Sotin, however, she’s a reliable member of the team. On the 
              other hand Helen Donath projects the tessitura of Beethoven’s 
              writing fearlessly and Siegfried Jerusalem has just the heroic ring 
              for this part – I think he enters marginally early at one 
              point in the Benedictus but no harm comes of it. The quartet 
              does well in the Benedictus – where guest leader 
              Ronald Thomas plays the violin solo very well – and overall 
              I don’t think anyone buying this recording will be seriously 
              disappointed by the solo performances.
               
              However, the real heroes and heroines of this performance are to be found in the chorus. The Edinburgh Festival Chorus, who had sung the work a few days earlier at the Edinburgh Festival, I understand, certainly makes an impressive sound. Back in the late 1980s and early 1990s 
              I sang in several performances of this work and I still count rehearsing 
              and performing it as one of the most taxing, though ultimately rewarding, 
              projects in my choral experience to date. The demands made on the 
              chorus are exceptionally severe: Beethoven seems to have had little 
              regard for his singers’ welfare and the writing is often punishing 
              – and for long stretches at a time. This  chorus copes 
              splendidly with the demands of the composer – and the conductor 
              – and the singers seem tireless.
               
              The choir is heroic in the closing ages of the Gloria. 
              They offer jubilation in the Et resurrexit section of the 
              Credo, which starts briskly and then seems to step up one 
              more gear. Also in that movement both of the fugues at Et vitam 
              venturi – the slow, quiet one and the lightning-quick 
              one that follows – are very well managed. And though all the 
              big, strenuous moments come off very well the quiet singing impresses 
              too. I was especially struck by the veiled tone of the tenors at 
              the start of Et incarnatus est in the Credo.
               
              Solti, who gets the LPO to play very well indeed, is on fine form. 
              Often he drives the music hard but not really much harder, I think, 
              than Beethoven intended. The performance is full of his famed intensity 
              but, then, this is a work that needs intensity if it is to succeed. 
              He’s expansive in the Kyrie, bringing out the grandeur 
              of the music, especially in Kyrie II. The start of the 
              Gloria is simply incandescent and I think he responds very 
              well to the differing and often dramatic moods of the Credo. 
              The Agnus Dei is very intense indeed although I noticed 
              in passing that the episode involving the recitative passages for 
              three soloists in succession — from cue G in the vocal score 
              — is not as fast as I would have expected, given that the 
              marking is Allegro assai. I admire Solti’s reading, 
              which seems well suited to a performance by very large forces in 
              a very large auditorium.
               
              The recording is the one made by the BBC for radio transmission. 
              There’s some tape hiss, which is especially noticeable at 
              the very start, but I found that my ears soon adjusted. The recording 
              is sometimes strained almost to breaking point by the sheer volume 
              of sound. For example, the sound is somewhat overloaded at the beginning 
              of the Gloria and is rather saturated at the start of the 
              Credo. However, for the most part the sound is perfectly 
              acceptable and offers a good sound picture of the performance.
               
              Reflecting on the performance when I’d heard it through I 
              felt that it was, perhaps, just a little unrelenting. Partly this 
              may be down to Beethoven but, though he gives a good account of 
              the score, I think Solti might have looked for a few opportunities 
              to relax a bit more. I believe Solti made a commercial recording 
              of Missa Solemnis in Chicago but I’m not sure how 
              readily available that recording currently is so his followers will 
              certainly want this recording – and possibly I addition to 
              the studio recording . My own preference for a live performance 
              of this work which is not in period style would still be Bernstein’s 
              1979 Concertgebouw recording for DG but this Solti version is also 
              worth hearing.
              
              John Quinn