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About
Following on the 2015 release of Mozart’s Requiem, Masaaki Suzuki and his Bach Collegium Japan has gone on to record the composers Mass in C minor, K427 – the ‘Great Mass’. As the nickname indicates it is a work of unusual proportions for a mass of the Classical period – or would have been so, had Mozart completed it. It is not known for what occasion Mozart intended the work, but a letter to his father Leopold dated 4 January 1783 indicate that he may have committed himself to writing it in connection with his marriage to Constanze and a planned visit to Salzburg. A performance of parts of the Mass did take place in Salzburg in October 1783, with Constanze performing the prominent soprano part. Two years later Mozart reused the music from the Kyrie and Gloria sections in the sacred cantata Davidde penitente, K?469, but the Mass itself was left incomplete. The present performance includes the sections completed by Mozart himself, as well as those sections for which extensive sketches by Mozart provided a basis for completion (by Franz Beyer in 1989). Three of Suzuki’s soloists also took part in the recording of the Requiem, while the Dutch mezzo-soprano Olivia Vermeulen makes her first appearance on BIS, shining in the aria Laudamus te. The disc closes with the celebrated cantata Exsultate, jubilate in which the soprano Carolyn Sampson glitters in the virtuosic solo part. As an appendix to the programme she and the Bach Collegium Japan orchestra also repeats the initial aria, in a less well-known later version with a slightly different text and with flutes replacing the oboes of the original.
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Reviews
Winner Choral category
Gramophone Awards 2017
ICMA Choral Category Nominee
2018 International Classical Music Awards
Editor's Choice
"...The Bach Collegium Japan's performance is thrilling, dynamic and totally committed: they rise to the challenge of the music's solemn splendour, yet remain fully alive to its episodes of typically Mozartian tenderness. While the choruses are sung magnificently, the jewel here is soprano Carolyn Sampson, in the Constanze role..." *****
Graham Lock - Early Music Today magazine - September-November 2017
Choral Category - Nomination
Gramophone Music Awards 2017
"... Masaaki Suzuki's thoughtful reading of the score demands considerable ability of breath control from the singers, and they do not disappoint. His augmented choral forces give an added depth to the interpretation of the music, which comes alive under his masterly baton. The blend of female soloists Carolyn Sampson and Olivia Vermeulen is particularly fine, Sampson also giving a stunning display of vocal gymnastics in Exsultate, Jubilate. Add to this the vibrant playing of the orchestral players and you have a performance worthy of adding to any collection." ****
Shirley Ratcliffe - Choir & Organ magazine - March/April 2017
Recording of the Month
Performance ***** Recording *****
"... A stunning Mozart Mass ..."
Berta Joncus - BBC Music magazine - January 2017
Editor's Choice - Vocal Section
"... the disc as a whole is certainly a winner; the Mass easily ranks alongside the period-instrument benchmarks."
David Threasher - Gramophone magazine - December 2016
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