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SEEN AND HEARD UK CONCERT REVIEW
Missa brevis in B-flat major, KV 275/272b
Divertimento in F major, KV 247, 'First Lodron Night-Music'
Gradual (Introit): Sancta Maria, mater Dei, KV 273
Missa brevis in F major, KV 192/186f, interspersed with:
Church Sonata in F major, KV 224
Offertorium de B.V. Maria: Alma Dei creatoris, KV 277
Communion: Gregorian chant 
  
  Mozart continues to be 'unwrapped' at  Kings 
  Place. I confess that I no more understand the 
  designation than I did before - or than I did for Beethoven and Chopin - but 
  more importantly, this exploration of sacred and other music for Salzburg 
  offered a delightful evening. The Choir of King's College under Stephen 
  Cleobury made a welcome debut at the festival, joined by the Dante Quartet and 
  other instrumentalists. 
  
  At the heart of the programme stood two missae breves. KV 275/272b, 
  in B-flat major, opened the concert. The unassuming nature of the performance 
  put me in mind of the delightful St John's recordings of Haydn and Mozart 
  under George Guest. (Cleobury was one of the Guest era's numerous organ 
  scholars.) That said, the sounds of King's and John's remain distinct: the 
  former 'whiter', more 'English', the latter more 'Continental' in timbre. 
  King's, however, had been joined by a notably fruity tenor, especially 
  prominent when intoning 'Credo in unum Deum'. After the Credo, a 
  little echo reminded me of its big brother in King's Chapel itself, but the 
  new location of Hall One, Kings Place, could otherwise hardly stand more 
  distinct from the choir's home. There were, then, no musical - or rather 
  anti-musical - shock tactics; instead, straightforward musical virtues, such 
  as clarity of line and diction, cleanness of counterpoint, and a decent 
  affection for Mozart's setting, were to the fore. The Sanctus sounded 
  nicely but never pedantically 'constructed'; structure is always central, 
  indeed crucial, to Mozart performance. Boys' voices had a particular 
  opportunity to shine, well taken, in the Benedictus. And the lovingly 
  extended 'Dona nobis pacem' music sounded every bit as catchy as it should be.
  
  
  The rest of the first half was devoted to the First Lodron Night-Music. 
  Three members of the Dante quartet and double bass were now joined by the 
  remaining quartet member (viola) and two horns. This equally delightful 
  divertimento received a performance that was sharp yet warm, and eminently 
  cultivated, its first movement inflections effortlessly 'natural': 
  characteristics that ought to go without saying in Mozart performance, yet are 
  frequently notable only by their absence. Inner movements proved elegantly 
  turned indeed, yet each possessed its own particular character, whether the 
  ravishing horn beauties of the third or the joy of the inner parts' interplay 
  during the fourth. The latter's minor-mode material provided dignified pathos, 
  without exaggeration, whilst the pizzicato lines of the fifth movement were 
  simply delightful. Mozart's finale proved as cheekily catchy as the 'Dona' 
  music from the Mass, all the more so on account of the players' resisting any 
  temptation heedlessly to rush. 
  
  For the second half, the Missa brevis in F major, KV 192/186f, was 
  presented semi-liturgically. That is, to say, there was no celebration of the 
  Mass, but accompanying music was provided, from the introductory Gradual to 
  Gregorian Chant - 'Beata viscera Mariae Virginis, quae portaverunt aeterni 
  Patris Filium. Alleluia' - which led straight into the Agnus Dei. 
  South German Rococo joy was present, yet never overdone, in the opening 
  Sancta Maria, KV 273: in Mozart, less so often proves more. Once again, 
  musical structure was admirably clear. The Kyrie imparted an apt 
  sense of earlier-century Neapolitan sacred music, its delights heightened once 
  again by admirably cultivated string playing. The Viennese style of Caldara, 
  and still more Fux, came effortlessly to the foreground in the Gloria. 
  It was a joy to hear the chamber organ (Ben-San Lau) for one of those glorious 
  Epistle Sonatas that we seemingly never have the opportunity to hear. (If only 
  they could be programmed every time in place of, say, a Vivaldi concerto!) The
  Credo's foreshadowing of the triumph of the 'Jupiter' 
  Symphony's finale - its quintessentially Fuxian contrapuntal tag, C-D-F-E, 
  here of course in F major, so F-G-B flat-A - was all the more welcome for 
  being simply presented rather than hammered home. Alma Dei creatoris, 
  the offertory hymn, was distinguished by a radiantly imploring treble line: 
  how could the Mother of God decline to intercede? The censer - albeit English 
  rather than full-bloodedly Austrian Baroque - was almost rendered visible in 
  the jubilant 'Osanna'. 
  
  I look forward to the second instalment on 12th 
  October, when the Second London Night-Music 
  will join two further missae breves, in G major, KV 140 and D major, 
  KV 194/186h - the latter interspersed with further Gregorian chant - 
  the D major Church Sonata, KV 245, the Offertorium, Venite populi, KV 
  260, and that ineffably sublime late motet, Ave verum corpus, KV 618. 
  For further details concerning 'Mozart Unwrapped', click
  here. 
  
  Mark Berry
