The catalogue is filled 
                to the point of bursting with recordings 
                of Mozart’s swansong, the unfinished 
                Requiem, so do we really need 
                another one? Well, yes if the new one 
                can add something significant, for example 
                present an alternative to the traditional 
                Süssmayr completions or perform 
                it in an untraditional way. This is, 
                to be sure, the Süssmayr version 
                and it is played on modern instruments, 
                so why bother? A look at the timing 
                in the heading might give an answer 
                – 41:03, that is fast, isn’t 
                it? I got out a favourite version, Franz 
                Welser-Möst on EMI, recorded about 
                15 years ago, and he clocks in at 49:40! 
                Further back in history Karl Böhm 
                needed even longer to reach in aeternum, 
                so here is an approach that might raise 
                an eyebrow or two. I started the reviewing 
                session by playing selected movements 
                from Welser-Möst’s recording and 
                everything felt so right: no long-windedness 
                but a healthy forward flow, finely contrasted 
                with the dramatic sections given their 
                due, secure singing from the London 
                Philharmonic Choir and a line-up of 
                renowned soloists with Felicity Lott 
                in her most silvery vein. Could this 
                really be bettered, provided you could 
                live without period instruments? 
              
 
              
When I switched over 
                to the new Naxos it was obvious from 
                the first bars that this was going to 
                be something quite different. Speeds 
                were even more flowing than Welser-Möst’s 
                but, more important, the actual sound 
                and the articulation of the music placed 
                it in a totally different world. The 
                Leipzig orchestra play on modern instruments 
                but they have adopted much of the period 
                movement’s way of playing with less 
                vibrato, less legato than the LPO strings 
                and overall sharper contours – it’s 
                like the difference between a charcoal 
                drawing and the needle-point lines of 
                an etching, i.e. the LPO seem to engage 
                the full string body with its fatter 
                sound while in Leipzig it’s a much slimmer 
                body. One could also put it that the 
                two orchestras are on either side of 
                the year 1800. The differences between 
                the choirs are along the same lines. 
                The sizeable LPO singers ring out magnificently 
                in the big outbursts and are wonderfully 
                silken in pianissimo; the GewandhausKammerchor 
                produce a leaner sound but are still 
                impressive at the dramatic highpoints, 
                although they can’t quite measure up 
                with the Londoners for sheer power in, 
                for example, Dies irae. The Leipzig 
                performance is agile, rhythmically incisive, 
                almost dancing where the LPO is more 
                traditionally solemn. And maybe that 
                is the crucial word, since solemnity 
                is the core of this work, and seeing 
                it as a religious work, which it certainly 
                is, Welser-Möst may have a point 
                or two at his advantage, but as a fresh 
                approach to what is after all a standard 
                choral work, Schuldt-Jensen is hard 
                to beat on musical grounds. 
              
 
              
Taking the soloists 
                into account complicates matters further, 
                since Welser-Möst has a stellar 
                line-up as set against a young and on 
                the whole lesser-known quartet. Lott 
                is definitely the better of the two 
                sopranos – traditionally speaking, Miriam 
                Allan has a thinner voice with almost 
                boy-treble qualities that take some 
                time getting used to and she isn’t always 
                as secure as Felicity Lott. The other 
                three has nothing to fear, though: Anne 
                Buter sings a wonderful solo in Benedictus 
                and Marcus Ullmann’s light lyrical tenor 
                is more in tune with the music than 
                Keith Lewis’s more heroic tones. Willard 
                White is of course his authoritative 
                self but Martin Snell is less strained 
                and his lowest notes are actually more 
                sonorous. I shall indeed be interested 
                to hear more of him. 
              
 
              
The two fillers on 
                the Naxos disc are worth having: Inter 
                natos mulierum a lively piece where 
                the young Mozart makes clever use of 
                the three trombones, Misericordias 
                Domini a darker, more mature composition. 
                But of course it is the Requiem 
                that is the selling-point and I hope 
                I have made clear its characteristics. 
                Playing and singing are of the highest 
                order and Schuldt-Jensen’s reading really 
                made me listen to the music with new 
                ears. The sound is good, not too reverberant, 
                and Keith Anderson’s liner-notes are, 
                as usual, excellent. We even get the 
                sung texts with English translations. 
              
 
              
As an extra bonus Naxos 
                enclose a sampler disc, "Grand 
                Choral Classics", with excerpts 
                from their back catalogue. Several of 
                these are quite long pieces and everything 
                is well recorded and performed. The 
                reason for this "extra" is 
                Naxos’ celebrating their first 18 years, 
                but the offer is valid only for a limited 
                period. Still, with bonus disc or not, 
                this is an enticing proposition. Lively, 
                joie de vivre 18th 
                century as set against Welser-Möst’s 
                more dramatic, more solemn but still 
                extremely vital 19th century. 
                At present I am biased towards Naxos 
                but my recommendation is: buy both. 
                The Welser-Möst is also at budget 
                price on EMI Encore. 
              
Göran Forsling