These recordings 
                    have been released previously, as 
                    a CFP 
                    Twofer, and the Requiem 
                    has also appeared individually. 
                    Past reactions to the Requiem 
                    have been somewhat mixed, with 
                    some fans claiming it as their favourite 
                    version, others finding it rather 
                    pedestrian. I can appreciate why 
                    EMI continue resurrecting it as 
                    a big-name part of their catalogue, 
                    but while there are many good things 
                    in it, I wouldn’t spend much time 
                    arguing its case as a first choice. 
                  
 
                  
Mozart’s Requiem 
                    is one of those pieces on which 
                    you don’t want to have to compromise 
                    in a recording. It’s either an inspirational 
                    rendition of an elusive, unfinished 
                    – even flawed masterpiece, or it’s 
                    just another disc which will sit 
                    on your shelves gathering dust. 
                    Welser-Möst’s opening is coloured 
                    by a rather sour clarinet, whose 
                    buzz-saw tones affect the whole 
                    sound of the orchestra once your 
                    ear has latched onto it, about 11 
                    seconds into track one. The choir 
                    is fine, if sometimes a little too 
                    shouty for my taste. Take the men’s 
                    entry 21 seconds into the Dies 
                    irae or the opening of the Confutatis 
                    maledictis and you’ll hear what 
                    I mean. The balance tends to drown 
                    out the orchestra as well, so that 
                    there is precious little detail 
                    from either in the big tuttis. The 
                    soloists are generally fine, and 
                    Willard White is also part of one 
                    of my favourite recordings of this 
                    work, coming across rather more 
                    effectively with John Eliot Gardiner 
                    on Philips. Della Jones can be a 
                    bit overly-dramatic, hacking out 
                    the notes which go over her break 
                    point 1:50 into the Tuba mirum. 
                    The ensemble work in the Recordare 
                    is nicely done as elsewhere, 
                    and the soloists do balance and 
                    blend with each other rather than 
                    fighting for supremacy. 
                  
 
                  
There are many 
                    nice things about this recording, 
                    but with so many others which offer 
                    so much more I can’t gather too 
                    much enthusiasm. My own favourite 
                    is still that of the 1986 Gardiner 
                    on Philips, but this does have the 
                    leaner sound of his baroque specialist 
                    instrumentalists and Monteverdi 
                    choir. If you are looking for a 
                    budget ‘non-authentic’ recording 
                    of the Requiem you could 
                    do far worse than that of Rafael 
                    Frühbeck de Burgos on CFP, 
                    and don’t be put off by that 1964 
                    recording date – those old analogue 
                    recordings are sweet as a nut. Either 
                    that or you could opt for the more 
                    up to date Morton 
                    Schuldt-Jensen on Naxos. 
                  
 
                  
The Great Mass 
                    in C minor also faces stiff 
                    competition, and again one of my 
                    favourites from the catalogue is 
                    my reference with John Eliot Gardiner 
                    on Philips. This competitor is topped 
                    off by the sublime singing of Sylvia 
                    McNair, and while both Edith Wiens 
                    and Dame Felicity Lott are both 
                    very fine singers, I find their 
                    comparatively over-ripe vibrato 
                    a little on the heavy side in this 
                    music. This style does however fit 
                    in with Franz Welser-Möst’s 
                    large-scale vision of the score, 
                    and is unlikely to bother anyone 
                    looking for a modern instrument 
                    performance on a grand scale. Indeed, 
                    I found myself warming more to the 
                    performance of the Mass over 
                    that of the Requiem in this 
                    set, so if this is your priority 
                    you might want to give this set 
                    more of a chance. The organ helps 
                    ‘glue’ the choir to the orchestra 
                    in the Mass, but once again 
                    I found myself straining to hear 
                    what is really going on in the orchestra 
                    when the choir is in full cry. Have 
                    a listen to the Gratias agimus 
                    tibi section of the Gloria 
                    and see if you agree – it’s 
                    a grand sound to be sure, but what 
                    exactly is it we are hearing? The 
                    dynamic contrasts in the Qui 
                    tollis are very fine, but while 
                    there is a good energy in the Cum 
                    Sancto Spiritu the whole thing 
                    sounds rather generalised and could 
                    have done with rather less soggy 
                    articulation. It takes the brass 
                    and winds a little while to wake 
                    up in the Sanctus as well: 
                    that first ‘reply’ to the choir 
                    is a bit on the crumby side, but 
                    with the organ enriching the picture 
                    this and the final vocal ensembles 
                    of the Benedictus are fittingly 
                    grand. 
                  
 
                  
I don’t want to 
                    be unfair, and it’s good to have 
                    a big-boned budget alternative for 
                    these works on the shop shelves. 
                    If I was still walking the floor 
                    in your local outlet however, I 
                    wouldn’t be shoving it under your 
                    nose or playing it at suspiciously 
                    loud volumes over the department’s 
                    speakers – well, maybe the Mass, 
                    but not often, not really. ... 
                  
Dominy Clements