This Blu-Ray preserves a concert given in the vast Baroque
cathedral of Salzburg in 1999 to mark the tenth anniversary of the death of
Herbert von Karajan. It’s quite a solemn occasion; there’s no
applause before or after the performances and at the end it appears that a
bishop motions everyone to stand in silence.
The performers are placed in front of the high altar and Abbado uses a slimmed-down
orchestra while the choir numbers around forty singers.
The concert opens with two short soprano arias sung by Rachel Harnish. ‘Betrachte
dies mein Herz und frage mich’ is elegantly sung and played but it’s
not top-drawer Mozart. The celebrated ‘Laudate Dominum’ is quite
a different matter; this is exquisite Mozart. Harnish sings the piece well
and she is stylishly supported by the choir and orchestra.
Karita Mattila takes over the soprano solo duties for the Requiem and she’s
joined by three equally stellar colleagues. This is a formidable solo quartet
and they live up to their respective reputations. At the start of the ‘Tuba
mirum’ I had the sense, perhaps wrongly, that Terfel was trying to pull
the music back a fraction from Abbado’s chosen speed but everything
soon settles and he anchors the quartet sonorously. Mattila’s gleaming
soprano is a consistent delight and both Mingardo and Schade sing extremely
well. These singers recognise that much of the solo writing is quasi-operatic
and they aren’t afraid to sing accordingly, though nothing is overdone.
Both the ‘Recordare’ and Benedictus are very fine.
The Swedish Radio Choir sings expertly and flawlessly. This is a flexible
yet highly disciplined ensemble and it shows. Theirs is a highly distinguished
contribution – the ladies’ quiet singing in the ‘Confutatis’
is a particular delight. The orchestral playing is on the refined level that
one associates with the Berliner Philharmoniker.
Abbado conducts with great distinction and taste, as you’d expect from
such a fine Mozart conductor. His pacing of the score is flawless and he takes
great care over detail – see, for example, how he gets the violins to
caress each pair of quavers in the ‘Lacrymosa’.
I’m not sure what edition of the score is used – and the booklet
is completely silent on this point. Mostly it’s the familiar Süßmayer
completion that we hear but there are some noticeable points of difference.
Among these are some points of detail in the orchestral parts of the Benedictus
– including some bars immediately before the ‘Hosanna’ which
are certainly not from the Süßmayer edition. The ‘Hosanna’ after
the Benedictus is not the familiar Süßmayer music and there are some alterations
to the choral parts in the Agnus Dei which I’ve never heard before.
I’m afraid I’m insufficiently familiar with the various completions
of the Requiem other than the tried and trusted Süßmayer version to enlighten
readers on this point. In any case, this is the sort of information which
ought to be provided in the documentation – but I bet no one at Euroarts
knows what edition was used.
However, the main thing is that this is a very distinguished performance of
the Requiem and a fitting tribute to Karajan by Abbado. The camera work is
very good. The sound quality is fully satisfactory. It’s clear from
the way the last chords of some movements echo around that the acoustic of
the cathedral is very reverberant but the engineers have tamed this so that
we hear the performers clearly without the sound being too close or constricted
in any way.
John
Quinn