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| |  | Health, Mind & Body | Home » » » Bach: Mass in B minor / McNair, Ziegler, Simpson, Aler, Stone, Paul; Shaw | | | | | | | Product Promotions: | | | | | Product Details: | | | Audio CD Release Date:
| October 10, 1990 | | Studio:
| Telarc | | Number Of Discs:
| 2 | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 10 reviews |
| | | Track Listing: | | | Disc: 1 | | | 1. | Kyrie | | 2. | Gloria | | | Disc: 2 | | | 1. | II. Symbolum Nicenum | | 2. | III. Sanctus | | 3. | IV. Osanna In Excelsis | | 4. | Benedictus | | 5. | Osanna In Excelsis | | 6. | Agnus Dei | | 7. | Dona Nobis Pacem | |
| | | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
( 10 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
82 of 86 found the following review helpful:
Even 200 stars would not be enoughOct 22, 2000
By Bob Zeidler Two hundred is probably a conservative lower bound on the likely number of times that Robert Shaw performed this monumental work over his considerable artistic lifetime. In the process, which covers a career that began with his Collegiate Chorale in 1941, then the Robert Shaw Chorale in 1948, then his tenure at the Cleveland Orchestra, as chorus director and assistant conductor under George Szell, then his appointment as music director of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra in 1968, and ultimately his frequent choral workshops in New York resulting in Carnegie Hall performances, this was one of his most frequently performed works. On various tours with these musical organizations, Shaw carried this masterpiece throughout the country and around the world.
In his authorized biography, "Dear People," written by Joseph Musselman (a former Shaw chorister who later achieved his own musical reknown as a choral music practitioner), there is a wealth of anecdotes about how his performances of this work could reduce folks to tears, from Alaskan Aleuts to college kids everywhere to Soviet apparatchiks at the height of the Cold War. One of the most telling anecdotes regarding his mastery, as well as his unassuming modesty in the face of it all, occurred after a performance that must have really jelled. Following the concluding "Dona Nobis Pacem" of the Bm Mass, Shaw left the podium and darted behind the curtain, awaiting the applause. He waited, and waited some more. Finally, not understanding why it was that the applause never arrived, he poked his head out from behind the curtain, only to find both the audience and the musicians facing each other and bawling their eyes out from what must have been a rendering of "Dona Nobis Pacem" for all time, in terms of its ability to open these tear-duct floodgates.
I read that anecdote in "Dear People" and listen to this recording for posterity and can only conclude that no one could top Shaw in this work, which, over a period of many years, I've finally come around to conclude in my own mind, is what may well be the finest contribution to what we call civilization. I have three other highly-regarded recordings of the Bm Mass, by Karl Richter, John Eliot Gardner, and Ifor Jones leading the Bethlehem Bach Choir, the only group who is remotely close to Shaw in terms of performance realizations. Each of them is fine in its way, and in its performance practices (whether "authentic instruments" or "modern," or "massive" choral resources vs. "reduced" forces). Each communicates the importance of the work, and I do not consider them useless duplication for a work this significant.
But when I want to be moved by the work, to truly be reduced to a quivering mass of jelly, this Shaw recording is always the one I turn to. His "Dona Nobis Pacem" grants me a serenity and quality of peace that no other performance can match.
Bob Zeidler
17 of 17 found the following review helpful:
Indescribably Beautiful and IngeniousApr 27, 2002
This remains the best recording of the B minor mass that I have ever heard. Each and every phrase soars to new levels. This recording, and of course, this mass, uplift the listener spiritually and intellectually. I own two other recordings of this mass, another by Robert Shaw with his own chorale and another with Herbert von Karajan. This second Robert Shaw recording, although wonderful, remains inferior to this Atlanta recording. I especially love the Credo, which very accurately portrays the trinity in its canonical form along with the unity of the father and the son with the "Et in unum Dominum, Jesum Christum." No recording more convincingly captures the reader's emotions and intellect in a spiritual ecstasy than this Robert Shaw Recording. Enjoy!
48 of 56 found the following review helpful:
Interesting but not quite greatMar 02, 2004
By madamemusico
"madamemusico"
This recording is interesting in that Robert Shaw took a one-voice-to-a-section balance for some of the choruses rather than using massed forces throughout. I like the effect, but am ready to admit that it's not quite kosher. In addition, all of his soloists are excellent except for bass Thomas Paul, a longtime NYC veteran of the Bach-Mozart circuit, who just was not in good voice here. The problem is that, even more so than Sir Georg Solti, Shaw makes "the crooked straight and the rough places plain," sacrificing the exciting edginess of Bach's counterpoint in favor of more homogenous textures. As the performance went on, I found myself more and more engaged by the soloists and less and less by the chorus....not a good thing in a work that is about 80% choral!Of the existing versions, John Eliot Gardiner's is probably the best, but if you seek out the old Peter Schreier recording on Philips you will be rewarded by a performance whose rhythmic and textual riches will delight you again and again. If you want a somewhat smoother Mass, the Solti recording has more enlivened orchestral and choral playing, though it borders on the over-reverent in tone and Bel Canto in style.
21 of 23 found the following review helpful:
PerfectionFeb 18, 2000
The orchestra playing is pretty good. It's on modern instruments, and thus it's very expansive and perhaps even heavy. Shaw's tempi are also slower, even downright legubrious at times, but I prefer to hear them as "serene," which suits the work. The soloists are ne plus ultra. Sylvia McNair is utterly moving here. She is astounding in the Christe, the Domine deus, and the duet with alto in the Et in Unum Dominum. Simpson is also very full and very musical. Stone & Paul are also quite good. Sylvia McNair, though, ah! An angel. The recording is almost worth buying just for her performance.
11 of 12 found the following review helpful:
An musically stunning recording of Bach's greatest work.Jul 06, 1999
Truly, Shaw's recording of the B Minor Mass is beautiful and extraordinarily well done. The voices are masterful. Except for a tiny cough in the "cujus regni non erit finis" the recording is flawless. The horn piece at the Quonium tu solus is fantastic. The initial Kyrie is perfectly delivered. Highly recommended to any Bach Mass fan.
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