Haydn, The Creation, S. Piau, M. Padmore, Gabrieli Consort, P. McCreesh (released February 5, 2008) Archiv 477 7361 |
McCreesh, ever careful about his performance practice choices, has opted to try to recreate what it is likely that Haydn had in mind. Namely, the overblown style of oratorio he had heard in London, with large orchestras and choruses, which was recreated in the earliest performances of the work in Vienna. That may not sound all that inviting, but he augments his Gabrieli Consort and Players by partnering with young musicians from Chetham's School of Music in Manchester. The sound is large but still refined and musically sensitive, of a sort that tempts one to forget about the label of historically informed performance (HIP) altogether.
Paul McCreesh, conductor Other Reviews: Monteverdi's 1610 Vespers | Handel, Saul | Gluck, Paride ed Elena |
McCreesh has Timothy Roberts accompany the recitatives, crucial hinge pieces that can often be neglected, on a fortepiano based on an early 19th-century Viennese instrument by Josef Brodmann. For me the test always comes at the end of the second part, where the creation of mankind is a source of wonderment. Here is where Haydn composed some of his most delectable music, especially the concluding angelic trio ("On thee each living soul awaits") with its wandering clarinet lines. It is likely the most perfect musical statement of the Enlightenment's humanist message, found in Uriel's gorgeous aria In native worth and honour clad. The lines "and in his eye with brightness shines the soul, / the breath and image of his God," on which Haydn dwells, are the later counterpart to the image of Adam's creation on the Sistine Chapel ceiling.
I'm confused -- how can the conductor be "ever careful of his performance practices" if he "single cast(s) the often doubled roles," something that was not done in Haydn's time?
ReplyDelete*sigh* "Ever," not "always." You also caught the part about how McCreesh changed the words, right? The air that went through the woodwinds was also not the same air as in Haydn's time.
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