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| |  | General | Home » » » » Verdi: Requiem & Operatic Choruses | | | | | | | Description: | | Robert Shaw learned from Arturo Toscanini, and in his stupendous 1987 recording for Telarc he managed to surpass the master on some points. He is unerring in his pacing and staging of climaxes, and draws phrasing and dynamics from the chorus that other conductors can only dream of. Points are made with exhilarating effect throughout the account: never has the bass drum in the Dies irae been as splendidly hammered as here, and the whooping brass in the Tuba mirum is breathtaking. The all-American solo quartet sounds a bit driven, especially the light-voiced Susan Dunn and Jerry Hadley, but their contribution is a strong one nonetheless. --Ted Libbey | | | Product Details: | | | Audio CD Release Date:
| October 25, 1990 | | Studio:
| Telarc | | Composer:
| Giuseppe Verdi | | Conductor:
| Robert Shaw | | Orchestra:
| Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra & Chorus | | Number Of Discs:
| 2 | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 13 reviews |
| | | Track Listing: | | | Disc: 1 | | | 1. | Requiem: 1. Requiem & Kyrie | | 2. | Requiem: 2. Dies Irae | | 3. | Requiem: 3. Offertory | | 4. | Requiem: 4. Sanctus | | | Disc: 2 | | | 1. | Requiem: 5. Agnus Dei | | 2. | Requiem: 6. Lux Aeterna | | 3. | Requiem: 7. Libera Me - 1. Libera Me - 2. Dies Irae - 3. Requiem Aeternam - 4. Libera Me | | 4. | Requiem: Spuntato Ecco | | 5. | Requiem: Patria Oppressa! | | 6. | Requiem: Fuoco Di Gioia | | 7. | Requiem: Va Pensiero | | 8. | Requiem: Gloria All'Egitto | |
| | | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
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Verdi-RequiemJun 12, 2010 This work was recommended to me by a performer of classical music, and I like it, but I am a recent student of classical music, so the only recommendation I can give is from my own personal preference.
0 of 1 found the following review helpful:
A superb recording.Nov 09, 2009 As one who is familiar with the works produced, especially the Verdi Requiem, the entire recording: chorus; orchestra; soloists were in a word, "thrilling" to hear done so very, very well.
1 of 2 found the following review helpful:
Sublime recording!Feb 09, 2009 This is a fantastic disc, a sublime and beautiful recording, which is just what I was looking for for my wife. It was hard to decide which recording to buy, but Robert Shaw and the Atlanta Symphony usually do a good gig. Soloists are excellent, chorus strong and not warbly, good tempi, good dynamic range, not too fast. Overall, perfect for our requirements!
1 of 2 found the following review helpful:
Worth the moneyFeb 26, 2008 I have no dissappointments. It is clear that the featured artists have surprising talent. There was more than one 'Wow!' in this receording.
13 of 19 found the following review helpful:
THE 'faultless' REQUIEM?Oct 10, 2007 I purchased this PG Rosette recording with high hopes, only to discover that the hype was (and is still) unjustified. Of the four soloists, only Curry and the late Hadley are entirely satisfactory, though regrettably the latter isn't as closely miked as his colleagues (but this is perhaps due to his lightweight timbre). Plishka's bass is rather dry, his 'Hostias' trill being quite memorably wobbly. Dunn isn't uplifting (ie too straight-faced) in 'Libera me': in addition to a shrieked-out high C, her intonation is rather unreliable - is it possible that nobody has ever noticed her 'aetArnam' and repeated 'LibeRRa'? (I suggest that 5-star reviewers clean their ears, or put on their headphones: on first hearing this, I wondered if the soprano is imploring God to deliver her from eternal death - 'libera me' - or asking for a drink/to be drunk - 'liberra me'.) The openings of 'Dies irae' are tame throughout (far from being hair-raising), and Shaw's tempi in 'Libera me' are erratic. My favourite late Verdi opera being DON CARLO, its chorus is not only cymbal-less and bell-less but also mercilessly butchered (no point in recording it at all). Telarc's parsimonious tracking for the REQUIEM isn't as annoying as the performance itself, which I thought was blemishless. I might have enjoyed this recording if it were my first REQUIEM, but I got it in order to discover what the fuss is all about long after hearing the likes of L. Price (Ormandy, Reiner, Karajan and Solti), Vishnevskaya (Melik-Pashaev), Milanov and Nelli (Toscanini), Tebaldi (Toscanini and de Sabata), Zadek, Stella, Janowitz, Freni and Tomowa-Sintow (Karajan), Caniglia and Vartenissian (Serafin), Ligabue and Shuard (Giulini), Sweet (Giulini and Schneidt), Nilsson (Leinsdorf), Arroyo (Bernstein), Sutherland and Brouwenstijn (Solti), M. Price, Ricciarelli and Gheorghiu (Abbado), Scotto (Muti), Studer (Abbado and Muti), Barker (Lombard), Orgonasova (Gardiner), Fleming (Gergiev), Connell (Hughes), and other soloists of both sexes on CD and DVD: no comparison.
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