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| Disc: 1 | |||
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| 1. Kyrie Eleison | |||
| 2. Christe Eleison | |||
| 3. Kyrie Eleison | |||
| 4. Gloria In Excesis Deo | |||
| 5. Et In Terra Pax | |||
| 6. Laudamus Te | |||
| 7. Gratias Agimus Tibi | |||
| 8. Domine Deus | |||
| 9. Qui Tollis Peccata Mundi | |||
| 10. Qui Sedes Ad Dextram Patris | |||
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| Disc: 2 | |||
| 1. Credo In Unum Deum | |||
| 2. Patrem Omnipotentem | |||
| 3. Et In Unum Dominum | |||
| 4. Et Incarnatus Est | |||
| 5. Crucifixus | |||
| 6. Et Resurrexit | |||
| 7. Et In Spiritum Sanctum | |||
| 8. Confiteor | |||
| 9. Et Exspecto | |||
| 10. Sanctus | |||
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Outstanding Performance of this Great Work,
By
This review is from: Bach - Mass in b minor / Heaston · Hanslowe · Rabiner · M. Tucker · N. Berg · Boston Baroque · Pearlman (Audio CD)
I have been secretly hoping that Boston Baroque would record the Bach B Minor Mass for some time now. I knew that they could present this great work in a clear, precise and emotional way. I have not been disappointed. Anyone familiar with previous recordings of Martin Pearlman and Boston Baroque (i.e. Handel's Messiah, Monteverdi's Vespers) knows what Pearlman and his group are capable of. Once again they deliver. I have heard (and own) almost all of the early music performances of this gigantic work and have found true satisfaction here, where most of the others always had some weakness along the way(with the exception of the Gardiner recording). Don't hesitate to leap at this recording. Onward Boston Baroque and I hope that there is a recording of some Handel oratorio in the near future. Having heard this group live many times, I know that they have a great repertoire under their belts which is just waiting to be committed to CD. Also kudos to Telarc for pricing the two CDs for the cost of one. Making great music more affordable to the public is something more CD companies should be doing.
16 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Bach at his best,
By
This review is from: Bach - Mass in b minor / Heaston · Hanslowe · Rabiner · M. Tucker · N. Berg · Boston Baroque · Pearlman (Audio CD)
When I think of all the things Bach accomplished in his life in music, the one aspect that continually amazes me is his ability to write choral music. The Mass in b Minor is in fact a major work. Pearlman brings all the elements together to have an end product of sheer beauty and listening enjoyment. Telarc did something outstanding on the recording of this work. This new DSD technology is superb. In this recording, there is increased clarity, brilliance, presence, and dynamics---in short a truer sound. The Boston Baroque plays excellently (if that is a real adverb). Compare this "period instrument" recording with what you may have and see for yourself----this new release is awesome.
34 of 44 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
REMEMBER PEOPLE, THIS IS A MASS, NOT A REQUIEM!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Bach - Mass in b minor / Heaston · Hanslowe · Rabiner · M. Tucker · N. Berg · Boston Baroque · Pearlman (Audio CD)
It seems that popular opinion has decreed for the B minor mass to be played with utmost gravity and weight. It should ALWAYS sound "German." It should ALWAYS sound "Baroque" in the literary sense. The drama and the agony must be placed-- ALWAYS--in the foreground. Personally, I think this performance practice should not ALWAYS apply to masterworks like the Bach's B minor mass. Many of those so-called definitive versions (Jochum, Shaw, Karajan, etc.) have wearied me so to the point of distraction with their hyperintensive seriousnesses and slow, teutonic pull. This is a new age, by crackey: I believe "church music" should be presented more directly and more humanely, sporting a less arch-romantic point of view. (And let's remember, people, the Bach's B-minor mass is first and foremost a MASS, not a REQUIEM. A powerfully involved, nonliturgical mass, perhaps, but still a MASS in it's practical construction and use!) Once or twice, I've heard this work proclaimed as the "holy of holies" of Lutheran choral composition. I might give in to that concession, for perhaps it is. But couldn't someone come along and simply lighten up the textures a bit, push the tempos just a tad, and subdue the dramatic voguing associated with traditional practice? Couldn't the conductor and the ensemble allow the words, music, and structural designs of the KYRIE, the CRUCIFIXUS, the ET RESERREXIT, and the SANCTUS speak for themselves? (I think, Rifkin may have attempted a "clearer" version during the 70s, by placing one voice, instrumental or otherwise, to a part!) But at last and finally, Maestro Martin Perlman and his wonderful Boston Baroque have heard and answered my prayers for a more direct--dare I say it? almost AMERICAN-- interpretation. And I return to my CD player with fresh, interested ears. The notes themselves now seem to witness directly of God's prevenient grace unaffected by the private dramaturgy of conductors of an earlier age. Thank you, Boston Baroque. And for those of you (trads) who cry "Blasphemy, Blasphemy" to Messr Perlman's performance choices, I only have to say to you: Bad putty tat. Bad. You should be ashamed.
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