Editorial Board
MusicWeb International
Founding Editor Rob Barnett Editor in Chief
John Quinn Contributing Editor Ralph Moore Webmaster
David Barker Postmaster
Jonathan Woolf MusicWeb Founder Len Mullenger
Heinrich Ignaz
Franz BIBER (1644-1704) 1 Missa Alleluja à 36, (1698) [26:44] Johann Heinrich SCHMELZER (c.1620-1680)
2 Vesperae sollennes, [19:13]
3 Sonata No.12 à 8 from Sacroprofanus concentus musicus [4:36] Giovanni Pierluigi da PALESTRINA (c.1525-1594)
4 Urbs beata Jerusalem (1589) [4:01] Johann Jacob FROBERGER (1616-1667)
5 Libro secondo di toccate: Fantasia no 2 (1649)
[4:50] Anonymous (mediaeval
chant)
6 Terribilis est locus iste [2:41]
7 Alleluia In dedicatione ecclesiae [2:14]
8 Stetit angelus iuxta aram templi [2:36]
9 Passer invenit sibi dominum [1:31]
10 Deus in adiutorium intende (14th century)
[0:19]
11 Domus mea [0:16]
12 Haec est domus Domini [0:25] 13 Bene fundata est [0:15]
14 Lapides pretiosi [0:27]
15 O quam metuendus [0:38]
Gradus ad
Parnassum (1, 2, 3, 4)
Concerto Palatino Choir (1, 2)
Vienna Hofburgkapelle (1, 2)
Vienna Hofburgkapelle Choralschola (6, 7, 8, 9, 10,11, 12,13,
14, 15)
Wolfgang Glüxam, organ (5) Konrad Junghänel (1, 2, 3, 4)
rec. May, 1994, Melk Monastery, Austria. DDD DEUTSCHE HARMONIA MUNDI 05472
77326 2 [73:55]
This is another in ArkivMusic’s reissue series: as with
all these Arkiv CDs you get a record company-authorised CD-R
at a favourable price, a reproduction of the original booklet’s
cover and back but the original liner-notes are not included.
It’s a programme put together of sixteenth and seventeenth
century music from the courts of Vienna and Salzburg with
the musical influences on the composers represented, as well
as the earlier chant that might have been heard in the course
of the mass. The CD’s ‘title’ is Multichoral Sacred Works
for Salzburg Cathedral and the Vienna Court Chapel. Biber
and Schmelzer take the lion’s share of this CD, though they
are nicely complemented by Palestrina and Froberger. A very
satisfying little mosaic and expertly played, this CD is
thoroughly recommended on all counts.
After a period as violinist at the Salzburg court, Biber
became Kapellmeister there in 1684, a post which he held
for the last twenty years of his life. Biber was a student
of Schmelzer, although the latter is more closely associated
with Vienna, the court at which Froberger also worked. Palestrina,
of course, worked in Rome a generation or so earlier but
was at the height of his influence when Biber, Schmelzer
and Froberger were active.
These are exciting, atmospheric and persuasive performances.
No comparative recordings of the major works here are in
the current catalogue, although the Sonata
No.12 from the Sacro-profanus is
coupled with another outstanding Biber Mass, Christi
Resurgentis by Manze and the English Concert on
Harmonia Mundi (907397) and the Froberger
is in volume 1 of Richard Egarr’s Complete
Keyboard set on Globe (6022). For these two different
reasons if this repertoire interests you or you are new to
it and think you would enjoy the magnificence of mid-Baroque
choral music, don’t hesitate to buy this excellent CD. Biber’s
masses are only now beginning to be seen for what they are… splendid,
committed and musically very compelling compositions that
make particularly spectacular (though never showy) use of
the words of the liturgy in a way that was not picked up
again until the Bach Passions.
It’s a repertoire in which Junghänel
is particularly at home and has built a solid reputation;
his Schütz Symphoniae Sacre discs also
on Harmonia Mundi being particularly fine. His direction
here is firm
and illuminating and it’s obvious he’s both at home in and
genuinely revelling the music; the same goes for the singers,
who are on top form.
The
choral singing in the other music is clean, unforced and – as
everything else on this offering – well-recorded (in a monastery
whose acoustic is a delight and enhances the music). Wolfgang Glüxam’s
brief appearance in the Froberger makes a telling interlude,
though the atmosphere isn’t really interrupted. If this is
the kind of music the Salzburg and Viennese court was used
to, they were lucky indeed!
Reviews
from previous months Join the mailing list and receive a hyperlinked weekly update on the
discs reviewed. details We welcome feedback on our reviews. Please use the Bulletin
Board
Please paste in the first line of your comments the URL of the review to
which you refer.