Anne Midgette, Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis is an entertaining challenge for NSO and Eschenbach (Washington Post, November 2) Robert R. Reilly, Cor ad cor loquitur: NSO and the Missa Solemnis (Ionarts, November 3) Mike Paarlberg, Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis at the Kennedy Center (Washington City Paper, November 3) John van Rhein, Haitink's CSO 'Missa Solemnis' achieves eloquence through directness (Chicago Tribune, October 26) Andrew Patner, Haitink, CSO, chorus, soloists go to the heart in ‘Missa solemnis’ (Chicago Sun-Times, October 26) Lawrence A. Johnson, Haitink’s spacious approach reaches the summit with CSO in Beethoven’s “Missa Solemnis” (Chicago Classical Review, October 26) Lauren Moraski, Lost Beethoven hymn uncovered, performed for first time in 192 years (CBS News, October 26) Martin Kettle, Monteverdi Choir/ORR/Gardiner (The Guardian, October 18) Andrew Clark, Monteverdi Choir, Barbican, London (Financial Times, October 21) |
Almost every section of the piece shows Beethoven thinking not in terms of liturgical text but in quasi-operatic vignettes: the boisterous "Credo, credo" song refrain of the middle movement, the martial interludes of battle sounds in the Agnus Dei, which has the feel of an operatic finale. The repetition of words and phrases, in ways that obviate the meaning of the text, abound, like the word Gloria returning in a shout at the end of the Gloria, or the Benedictus music and its words returning after the second Osanna refrain. So much of the piece is extremely dense, with two big fugues ending with booming pedal points, lots of bombast, and Eschenbach gave it all the oomph he could get, keeping the orchestra in control to emphasize the sound of the chorus. (The organ part was rendered on a rented instrument, not the pipes of the new Concert Hall organ.) Not surprisingly, for such a loud and complicated work, the most effective moments are in the small Sanctus movement, with its somber opening and mysterious harmonies. A lush orchestral interlude introduces the strangest and most wonderful moment in the Missa Solemnis, when a solo violin descends at the chanted words of the Benedictus, escorted on the wings of the two flutes, fluttering just underneath the violin. It is a striking thing in the score, to see most of the vast instrumentation cleared away, and the three voices moving in what used to be called fauxbourdon, or what tonal theorists call a series of triads in first inversion. Concertmaster Nurit Bar-Josef, standing for this long solo, left me stranded on a cloud by the intensity and yet simplicity of her playing.
This week's National Symphony Orchestra concerts (November 8 to 10) will feature music by Richard Strauss and Dvořák, as well as three different Beethoven piano concertos over the three concerts, played by Lang Lang, who is in residence with the NSO all this week.
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