Westminster Cathedral Choir & James O'Donnell - Kodály & Janáček: Masses (2000)
Artist: Westminster Cathedral Choir & James O'Donnell, Westminster Cathedral Choir, James O'Donnell, Andrew Reid
Title: Kodály & Janáček: Masses
Year Of Release: 2000
Label: Hyperion
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image + .cue, log, booklet)
Total Time: 72:40 min
Total Size: 251 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Kodály & Janáček: Masses
Year Of Release: 2000
Label: Hyperion
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image + .cue, log, booklet)
Total Time: 72:40 min
Total Size: 251 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Missa Brevis: Introitus
02. Missa Brevis: Kyrie
03. Missa Brevis: Gloria
04. Missa Brevis: Credo
05. Missa Brevis: Sanctus
06. Missa Brevis: Benedictus
07. Missa Brevis: Agnus Dei
08. Missa Brevis: Ite, missa est
09. Laudes Organi: Introduction
10. Laudes Organi: Audi chorum
11. Laudes Organi: Musice! milites
12. Laudes Organi: Gravis chorus
13. Laudes Organi: Nunc per voces
14. Laudes Organi: Tali modulo
15. Laudes Organi: Huius artis
16. Laudes Organi: Fiat amen
17. Mass In E Flat: Kyrie
18. Mass In E Flat: Credo
19. Mass In E Flat: Sanctus
20. Mass In E Flat: Agnus Dei
To the average secular humanist, Zoltan Kodaly's Missa Brevis can be a bewildering experience. It's an erratic expanse of music, ranging from deep-throated organ runs to angelic boys-choir arrangements--all over, one might say, God's green earth. The familiar "Gloria in excelsis Deo," sung solemnly by a solo male voice, blossoms instantly into full-bodied polyphony; the brief but elaborate organ works that bookend the mass proper threaten to smother its memory. Pairing Kodaly with Leos Janacek makes more sense as concept album than as seamless listening experience. Both wrote church music in the early 20th century, but the differences between these works are more striking than are their similarities. Janacek's vocal settings are highly sophisticated, concerned less with the specific words of God than with their haunting spirit. He favors shifting vocal parts, in contrast with Kodaly's formal rounds; when Janacek's voices do align, it's for stark dramatic effect. The choir is remarkable in its enunciation and ensemble, but the volume levels on this recording vary so widely as to unnecessarily complicate the selection of an appropriate listening level. Paul Wingfield's opinionated liner notes remind us that the Lord's work is fraught with human ego. -- Marc Weidenbaum