In 1962, Walter Legge
                    invited Klemperer to make a recording of Bach's Mass in B
                    minor for EMI. Although the Mass was a work that Klemperer
                    was strongly drawn to, he nonetheless declined the offer.
                    He was reluctant to conduct the work using the vast forces
                    that were typically employed for performances as he believed
                    it should be performed with numbers similar to those that
                    Bach would have envisaged. Several years later he proposed
                    a recording of the piece using "authentic" forces
                    of a choir of 48 and under 50 instrumentalists - hence this
                    recording.
                
                 
                
                The Mass is an extremely
                    important work. Bach originally composed a short version
                    in 1733 as an offering to the new Elector of Saxony. The
                    great composer then spent a decade studying Mass settings
                    by composers both living and dead and only in 1748-9 did
                    he complete the full version of the B minor Mass, recycling
                    some of his best music thus far. To this day it remains a
                    mystery why he composed the work, given the fact that it
                    wasn't commissioned. It is suggested that he saw it as the
                    highest musical form, setting the greatest of Christian rites
                    and therefore both a personal statement of belief and the
                    pinnacle of his life's work.
                
                 
                
                The Mass clearly meant
                    a great deal to Klemperer, also, who stated that "for
                    me Bach's B minor Mass is the greatest and most unique music
                    ever written". On top of his "authentic forces" condition,
                    Klemperer was very picky about way it was recorded and the
                    choice of soloists. He worked hard to ensure that he captured
                    the musical and dramatic effects he wanted - for example,
                    making the choir sit down for Et Incarnatus Est to
                    create a disembodied, ethereal sound - which works brilliantly.
                
                 
                
                The outcome is a wonderful recording. 
                The Mass opens with the Kyrie, taken 
                at a steady pace, which unfolds nicely 
                and is appropriately full of pathos. 
                The soloists are all excellent - Baker 
                with her rich, mature voice outstanding 
                in Laudamus Te, the tenor Nicolai 
                Gedda quite - but not too -  dramatic 
                with just the right amount of vibrato, 
                and baritone Hermann Prey and bass Franz 
                Crass both lyrical and dexterous. Baker, 
                meanwhile sings the stunningly beautiful 
                Agnus Dei with an incredibly 
                deeply-felt searing intensity.  The 
                singers work well together in the duets 
                - particularly Baker and Giebel in a 
                gorgeous rendition of Et In Unum 
                Dominum. 
                                 
                
                The BBC Chorus are excellent,
                    producing a gloriously full sound in Gratias Agimus Tibi,
                    in an incredibly passionate Cum Sancto Spiritu, and
                    in the exultant Sanctus, full of joy and glory - they
                    are also wonderfully otherworldly and eerie in Et exspecto
                    resurrectionem Mortuorum. Nor does the New Philharmonia
                    Orchestra let the side down - listen, for example, to the
                    beautifully gossamer instrumental introduction to Domine
                    Deus or the tender, melting strings in Agnus Dei.
                
                 
                
                Klemperer has the balance
                    just right in this performance - it is neither soupy and
                    sentimental nor cold and clinical, but retains a wonderful
                    dramatic quality without ever going overboard. The individual
                    lines are allowed to sing out with clarity, and Klemperer's
                    respectful approach does justice to the spirit of the piece
                    as well as to the written music itself. Overall, this performance
                    is full of  a sense of radiance, beauty and nobility and
                    is one I can heartily recommend.
                
                 
                
                    Em Marshall
              
              
                
                    EMI Great Recordings of the Century themed review page