Verdi was not a religious man. Indeed, it is fair to say he was,
                like many contemporary artists and republicans, anti-clerical
                and particularly anti-Pope. They held the latter view in response
                to the activities of holders of the Papal office over the period
                of the fight for Italy’s unification and independence.
                Verdi equally clearly recognised the place of the Catholic Church
                in then contemporary society. Verdi revered two compatriots,
                fellow composer Rossini and the writer Manzoni. At the death
                of each he proposed the composition of a Requiem (see 
review).
                That for Rossini was to be a collaborative venture among contemporary
                Italian composers. Verdi wrote the 
Libera Me but problems
                arose in respect of the chorus and orchestra and the project
                floundered. Verdi met the costs incurred. 
                
                In the year of Rossini’s death Verdi visited his idol Alessandro
                Manzoni. He had read Manzoni’s novel 
I Promessi Sposi when
                aged sixteen and in his fifty-third year wrote to a friend: “… according
                to me, (he) has written not only the greatest book of our time
                but one of the greatest books that ever came out of the human
                brain.” The novel has been described as representing for
                Italians all of Scott, Dickens and Thackeray rolled into one
                and infused with the spirit of Tolstoy. It was not merely the
                nature of Manzoni’s partly historical story that gave the
                work this ethos, but the language. With it Manzoni made vital
                steps towards a national Italian language to replace the many
                dialects and foreign administrative languages present in the
                peninsula. 
                
                When Manzoni died in May 1873, after a fall, Verdi was devastated
                to the extent he could not go to the funeral. A week after the
                funeral Verdi went to Milan and visited the grave alone. Then,
                through his publisher, Ricordi, he proposed to the Mayor of Milan
                that he should write a 
Requiem Mass to honour Manzoni
                to be performed in Milan on the first anniversary of the writer’s
                death. There would be no committee this time. Verdi proposed
                that he himself would compose the entire Mass, pay the expenses
                of preparing and printing the music, specify the church for the
                first performance, choose the singers and chorus, rehearse them
                and conduct the premiere; the city would pay the cost of the
                performance. Thereafter the 
Requiem would belong to Verdi.
                The city accepted with alacrity. 
                
                With artistic unity guaranteed by a single composer, Verdi intended
                the work to have a regular place in the repertoire just like
                his operas and other works. Although he had already composed
                a 
Libera Me for the abortive 
Rossini Requiem Verdi
                largely re-wrote it thus ensuring compositional coherence. He
                selected the Church of San Marco for the premiere, considering
                it to have the best proportions and acoustics. On 22 May 1874,
                the first anniversary of Manzoni’s death, with an orchestra
                of one hundred and chorus of one hundred and twenty the 
Requiem was
                given and acclaimed. Three days later Verdi conducted another
                performance at La Scala. The 
Requiem is certainly not
                in the tradition of ecclesiastical works set to counterpoint
                and fugues, a fact that at least some purists considered did
                not distract the listener from the religious message. Despite
                criticisms of this nature the 
Requiem travelled to Paris
                where Verdi was made a Commander of the Legion of Honour. After
                Paris, London and Vienna followed with the work received with
                great success in each. 
                
                The 
Manzoni Requiem, as it is often called, has been referred
                to by some cynics as Verdi’s best opera! Certainly the
                greatest recorded performances seem to have been under the baton
                of renowned opera conductors. After a long apprenticeship, extended
                by the Second World War, Solti made his name as music director,
                first of the Munich (1946-1952) and then of the Frankfurt Opera
                (1952-1961) and particularly in the German repertoire. This brought
                him to the notice of Decca who signed him up to conduct the first
                ever complete recording of Wagner’s 
Ring cycle.
                He seemed then, and later, to lack the same depth of empathy
                with the Italian school of composers including Verdi. 
                
                Whilst Giulini’s studio recording of the work from the
                same period (EMI) has a unity of near spiritual essence, Solti’s
                interpretation, as evidenced here is anything but unified. It
                varies greatly in both tempi and modulation. As in his later
                studio recording for Decca (411-944-2), he whips up a passion
                in the 
Dies Irae (CD 1 tr.2) whilst elsewhere he is unduly
                languorous as in the 
Lacrimosa (Cd 1 tr.11). Added to
                this variability is the quality of the solo singing and the acoustic.
                The whole is set in a resonant acoustic. The orchestra are placed
                well back on the sound-stage with the chorus and soloists set
                behind and often overwhelmed. Gré Brouwenstijn, so distinguished
                in Giulini’s incomparable live recording of 
Don Carlo from
                Covent Garden (see 
review)
                in May 1958, is vocally distinctly more variable with a lack
                of steadiness. She sounds strained at times as well as exhibiting
                a tendency to scoop up to notes (CD 1 tr.2 and CD 2 tr.3). The
                mezzo Oralia Dominguez has a steadier and welcome creamy tone.
                Of the men Nicola Zaccaria is sonorous with his 
mors stupebit in
                the 
Tuba mirum (Cd.1 t.4). Giuseppe Zampieru has no particular
                vocal distinction or phrasing in the 
Ingemisco (Cd 1 tr.8). 
                
                If at this stage of his career I find Solti to have little empathy
                for Verdi, then he has even less for Rossini being far too metronomic
                in approach. He treats the bonus tracks as orchestral showpieces
                as he might in the days when an orchestral concert consisted
                of an overture, a concerto and a symphony. That approach is valid
                in this way. However, after hearing these pieces in the context
                of complete performances, as is our privilege courtesy of the
                various recorded media of our day, expectations of integration
                of composer style are much higher. Solti’s exaggerated
                dynamics are not welcome. That said, these pieces do have the
                benefit of a more normal recorded sound.
                
                
Robert J Farr 
                
                Reviews of Verdi's Requiem on Musicweb