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Trevor Pinnock, The English Concert - Handel: Messiah - Arias and Choruses (1988)

Trevor Pinnock, The English Concert - Handel: Messiah - Arias and Choruses (1988)
  • Title: Handel: Messiah - Arias and Choruses
  • Year Of Release: 1988
  • Label: Archiv Produktion
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
  • Total Time: 01:11:13
  • Total Size: 349 / 184 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

Messiah HWV 56
Part One
1. 1. Sinfony (Grave - Allegro Moderato) 3:22
2. 3. Air (Tenor): Ev'ry Valley Shall Be Exalted 3:32
3. 4. Chorus: And The Glory Of The Lord Shall Be Revealed 2:51
4. 6. Air (Alto): But Who May Abide The Day Of His Coming 4:45
5. 7. Chorus: And He Shall Purify 2:25
6. 9. Air (Contralto) And Chorus: O Thou That Tellest Good Tidings 5:30
7. 13. Pifa (Pastoral Symphony) 1:11
8. 18. Air (Soprano): Rejoice Greatly, O Daughter Of Zion 4:48
Part Two
9. 24. Chorus: Surely He Hath Borne Our Griefs 2:28
10. 25. Chorus: And With His Stripes We Are Healed 1:53
11. 26. Chorus: All We Like Sheep Have Gone Astray 3:54
12. 29. Accompagnato (Tenor): Thy Rebuke Hath Broken His Heart 1:50
13. 30. Arioso (Tenor): Behold, And See If There Be Any Sorrow 2:00
14. 35. Chorus: Let All The Angels Of God Worship Him 1:30
15. 37. Chorus: The Lord Gave The World 1:05
16. 40. Air (Bass): Why Do The Nations So Furiously Rage 2:56
17. 43. Air (Tenor): Thou Shalt Break Them 2:06
18. 44. Chorus: Hallelujah 3:57
Part Three
19. 45. Air (Soprano): I Know That My Redeemer Liveth 6:42
20. 52. Air (Contralto): If God Be For Us 4:41
21. 53. Chorus: Worthy Is The Lamb That Was Slain - Amen 7:31

Performers:
The English Concert
Conductor, Harpsichord – Trevor Pinnock

Trevor Pinnock meets with mixed success in this account of the Messiah with the English Concert & Choir and soloists Arleen Auger, Anne Sofie von Otter, Michael Chance, Howard Crook, and John Tomlinson, recorded and released in 1988. Its strengths are the strengths of the early-music movement in general. The size and distribution of the instrumental and vocal forces are optimal, which means that textures are clear and balances apt. Rhythms are nicely pointed, though often, in Pinnock's case, not quite well enough sprung. Tempos are well chosen; for example, "All we like sheep"--which turns out to be one of the set's best numbers--is a real bourré, and Pinnock animates it in just the right way. But the performance often seems workmanlike and unemotional, weighed down in too many instances by the humdrum work of the chorus. The alto section in particular, which is half male and half female, sings timidly and is constantly swallowing its entrances. Bass soloist John Tomlinson is a further drag on the effort. He has the right idea--that there's an Italian opera hiding behind all this biblical imagery--but his cottony sound is out of place, a misguided attempt to mimic Nicolai Ghiaurov. His usable range is less than a tenth (he croaks the low G's and F-sharps), and his diction is horrible. "Thus spake the Lord" is strangled, and when, in "The trumpet shall sound" Tomlinson gets to the words "we shall be changed," one can't help wishing that he had been changed too, right before the sessions started. --Ted Libbey




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  • olga1001
  •  wrote in 23:40
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Complete one is on meetingin...