Vox Luminis & Lionel Meunier - Bach: Magnificat - Handel: Dixit Dominus (2017) [CD-Rip]
Artist: Vox Luminis & Lionel Meunier
Title: Bach: Magnificat - Handel: Dixit Dominus
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Alpha Classics
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image + .cue, log, artwork)
Total Time: 61:22 min
Total Size: 297 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Bach: Magnificat - Handel: Dixit Dominus
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Alpha Classics
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image + .cue, log, artwork)
Total Time: 61:22 min
Total Size: 297 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Johann Sebastian Bach
Magnificat in D major, BWV 243
01. Magnificat Anima Mea
02. Et Exultavit
03. Quia Respexit
04. Omne Generationes
05. Quia Fecit Mihi Magna
06. Et Misericordia
07. Fecit Potentiam
08. Deposuit Potentes
09. Esurientes Implevit Bonis
10. Suscepit Israel
11. Sicut Locutus
12. Gloria Patri
George Frideric Handel
Dixit Dominus, HWV 232
13. Dixit Dominus Domino Meo
14. Virgam Virtutis Tuae
15. Tecum Principium in Die Virtutis
16. Juravit Dominus
17. Tu Es Sacerdos in Aeternum
18. Dominus a Dextris Tuis
19. Judicabit in Nationibus
20. Conquassabit Capita
21. De Torrente in Via Bibet
22. Gloria Patri Et Filio
The Belgian early music group Vox Luminis has made several wonderful recordings of lesser-known Baroque repertory. They cultivate a distinctive sound with ten or 15 singers (here there are ten) and a small instrumental group, diverging completely from the general Italianate-operatic trend toward brisk tempos, sharp accents, and dramatic conceptions. Here they take on two very familiar works and meet the challenge of creating unique interpretations. Even in the splendid Bach Magnificat in D major, BWV 243 (sample one of the big choruses, perhaps "Fecit potentiam"), they are smooth and even delicate. The sound is all the more impressive in that leader Lionel Meunier does not really conduct; he sings in the choir itself. Yet the carefully burnished sound is extremely coherent. The effect is to deliver a personal aspect even to these highly public works. In this kind of reading there is the necessity for the performers to deliver text intelligibility and for the instrumentalists to deliver balance, and all succeed nicely, as do Alpha Classics' engineers, working in a pair of churches (Belgian for the Handel, Dutch for the Bach). This is a beautifully rendered representation of standard repertory that draws you into entirely new ways of looking at the music. -- James Manheim