Schumann: Requiem Op.148, Requiem for Mignon [Import]

Track Listings
1. Requiem Aeternam    
2. Te Decet Hymus    
3. Dies Irae    
4. Liber Sciptus    
5. Qui Mariam Absolvisti    
6. Domine Jesu Christi    
7. Hostias Et Preces Tibi    
8. Sanctus    
9. Benedictus -Agnus Dei    
10. Wen Thr Uns Zur Stillen Gesellschaft    
11. Ach! Wie Ungern Brachten Wir Ihn Her    
12. Seht Die Machitgen Flugel Doch An!    
13. In Euch Lebe Die Bildende Kraft    
14. Kinder, Kehret Ins Leben Zuruck!    
15. Kinder, Eilet Ins Leben Hinan!    

Schumann: Requiem Op.148, Requiem for Mignon, Music, Donath, Kaufmann, Lipovsek, Moser, Sawallisch, Robert Schumann, Wolfgang Sawallisch, Classical
Schumann: Requiem Op. 148, Der Rose Pilgerfahrt Op. 112, Requiem fur Mignon Op. 98b, Mass Op. 147 - Wolfgang Sawallisch, Rafael Fruhbeck de Burgos, Bernhard Klee
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Schumann for Schumann Completists
Schumann: Requiem Op. 148, Der Rose Pilgerfahrt Op. 112, Requiem fur Mignon Op. 98b, Mass Op. 147 - Wolfgang Sawallisch, Rafael Fruhbeck de Burgos, Bernhard Klee

Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

All Works by Robert SchumannAll Works by Robert Schumann | Schumann, Robert | ( S ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
RequiemsRequiems | Forms & Genres | Early Music | Historical Periods | Classical | Styles | Music
General ModernGeneral Modern | Modern, 20th, & 21st Century | Historical Periods | Classical | Styles | Music
Sawallisch, WolfgangSawallisch, Wolfgang | ( S ) | Featured Performers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Symphonies | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
MassesMasses | Vocal Non-Opera | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
RequiemsRequiems | Vocal Non-Opera | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Brahms: Ein deutsches Requiem [A German Requiem]
  2. Nicolas Flagello: Piano Concerto No. 1; Dante's Farewell; Concerto Sinfonico
  3. Robert Schumann: Das Paradies und die Peri / Requiem für Mignon / Nachtlied - The Monteverdi Choir / Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique / John Eliot Gardiner
  4. Schumann: Violin Sonatas 1-3
  5. Vivaldi: Griselda

ASIN: B000EMSPLU
Release Date: 2006-05-02

Tracks:

  1. Die Fruhlingslufte Bringen
  2. Johannis War Gekommen
  3. Wir Tanzen In Lieblicher Nacht
  4. Und Wie Sie Sangen
  5. So Sangen Sie, Da Dammert's Schon
  6. Bin Ein Armes Waisenkind
  7. Es War Der Rose Erster Schmerz
  8. Wie Blatter Am BAum
  9. Die Letzte Scholl' Hinhunter Rollt
  10. Dank, Herr, Dir Dort Im Sternenland
  11. Ins Haus Des Totengrabers
  12. Zwischen Grunen Baumen
  13. Von Dem Greis Geleitet
  14. Bald Hat Das Neue Tocheterlein
  15. Bist Du Im Wald Gewandelt
  16. Im Wald, Gelehnt Am Stamme
  17. Der Abendschlummer Umarmt Die Flur
  18. O Sel'ge Zeit, Da In Der Brust
  19. Wer Kommt Am Sonntagmorgen
  20. Ei Muhle, Liebe Muhle
  21. Was Klingen Denn Die Horner
  22. Im Hause Des Mullers
  23. Und Wie Ein Jahr Verronen Ist
  24. Roslein! Zu Deinen Blumen Nicht
  25. Reqiem Fur Mignon Op.98b - Bernhard Klee

Tracks:

  1. Kyrie - Berliner Philharmoniker
  2. Gloria - Berliner Philharmoniker
  3. Credo - Berliner Philharmoniker
  4. Offertorium: Tota Pulchra Es - Berliner Philharmoniker
  5. Sanctus-Benedictus - Berliner Philharmoniker
  6. Agnus Dei - Berliner Philharmoniker
  7. Requiem Aeternam - Bernhard Klee
  8. Te Decet Hymnus - Bernhard Klee
  9. Dies Irae - Bernhard Klee
  10. Liber Scriptus - Bernhard Klee
  11. Qui Mariam - Bernhard Klee
  12. Domine Jesu - Bernhard Klee
  13. Hostias - Bernhard Klee
  14. Sanctus - Bernhard Klee
  15. Benedictus - Bernhard Klee

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Schumann for Schumann Completists.......2006-08-07

The EMI Gemini series is more often about convenience and cost savings than about definitive performances of repertoire pieces. Here, we have a case in which the pieces involved, except for "Requiem fur Mignon," are so far outside the standard repertoire that they are difficult to find in any performances, let alone definitive ones. Schumann's "Der Rose Pilgerfahrt" has fared much better on disc than the Mass and Requiem. There are a couple of good recent recordings--one using the original scoring for voices and piano--available. But they are both more expensive, and given the fact that Frubeck de Burgos's performance is a sympathetic one, with first-rate vocal soloists and thoroughly respectable contributions from the chorus and orchestra, I can't see making the extra outlay of capital.

Despite Schumann's literary sophistication, he happened to choose second- or third-rate sources for three of his most ambitious works--"Paradies und die Peri," "Genoveva," and "Der Rose Pilgerfahrt"--resulting in music that is less than top drawer, with the exception of "Paradise und die Peri." As in that work, Schumann in "Rose" used and even advanced his technique of continuous arioso, a way of disposing of the aria-and-recitative arrangement of traditional operas and oratorios. This practice is even more advanced in "Rose," with an added attempt at a continuous flow between individual numbers as well: numbers are linked by held notes, incomplete cadences, and so forth, all of which is interesting to hear the first time around. Despite this forward-looking gesture, however, overall, the piece is a throwback to the fairy world of early Romanticism. There is an obeisance to the Mendelssohn of Midsummer Night's Dream and even to the Weber of Der Freischutz. In fact, one of the male choruses bears a striking resemblance to the hunting chorus from Weber's opera, though nothing in Schumann's work has the energy or spirit of the best of Weber's. Schumann's piece, overall, is a tender, harmless bit of reactionary Romanticism that, for all its charms, fails to make a lasting impression.

At least Schumann was on familiar ground in this exercise in early German Romanticism. In the Mass and Requiem, he was fulfilling what he saw as a duty of the serious composer but without any other compelling motivation that I can hear. The result is two dutiful, mostly forgettable works. Of the two, the Mass seems the more accomplished to me. It has a quiet but restless Kyrie that gives the air of troubled calm. This is followed by a Gloria that seems well wrought to me, even down to the imposing fugal writing. As to the rest, there is a tender Offertorium for soprano, cello solo, and organ that is pure Schumann. Sometimes, it is extracted from the work and presented as a soprano-solo vehicle. The rest of the score is unmemorable. The Hosana and especially the long Credo are four-square and stodgy in Schumann's worst manner. Whereas Schumann could set the words of Eichendorff or Heine with consummate skill, he is entirely baffled by this statement of the Catholic faith.

The Requiem is usually cited for the spooky octave leaps of the Dies Irae. Other than that, the piece leaves even less of an impression than does the Mass. The piece is neither fish nor fowl, falling into the netherworld between the quiet elegy of Faure and the blood-and-thunder apocalypse of Berlioz and Verdi.

After the Requiem, it's refreshing to turn to Schumann's other Requiem, the one for Mignon. This may be Schumann's finest choral work, novel in conception and very successful in execution. Klee's performance is a good one, hampered only by a wobbly Fischer-Dieskau, near the end of his distinguished career. John Eliot Gardiner's performance has the benefit of a finer bass (William Dazeley), the added piquancy of period instruments, as well as the added authenticity of boys' choir, so this is the performance to have, supposing you also want Schumann's "Paradies und die Peri" in a definitive performance.

Some reviewers purport to hear a large difference between the performance of the Mass by Sawallisch and that of the Requiem by Klee; their ears or sensibilities are more finely tuned than mine. Both performances are quite competent and do as much for Schumann as can be done, I think. The digital sound in the Sawallisch and Klee performances is very clean and provides good detail, but it tends to an unnatural brightness. The analog sound in Frubeck's "Rose" is warmer and more rounded, though the recording of the soloists isn't entirely natural; there is a slight halo of reverb around the voices, especially the bass. But this is a small matter. The sound throughout is entirely acceptable. So if you want to complete your collection of Schumann choral music on the cheap, this Gemini set is a reliable way to do so.

Music Review:

  1. Second Love [Import]
  2. Shostakovich: Card Party, the Fairy's Kiss
  3. Skryabin: Symphony No4; Albeniz: Iberia in Afm no1,B47
  4. Sonatas For Piano And Cello
  5. Songs to Celebrate the Birth of Christ
  6. Sounds of Bach By the Sea
  7. Spanish Guitar Concertos
  8. Strauss: Famous Waltzes
  9. Symphony No. 12 Concerto for Piano Trumpet & Orche
  10. Symphony No. 3 "Eroica"/3 Overtures

Music Review

music review

Music Review

World Standard V.1: a Tatsuo Sunaga Live Mix [Import]

Faure: Dolly, suite for piano duet Op56/1-6; Sonata for violin No1

Devienne:Sinfonie Concertanti

Music: Soft Lights

Double Feature: The Dirty Dozen (1967 Film) / Dirty Dingus Magee (1970 Film) [Soundtrack] [Import]

Don't Hold Nothing Back

Crosby, Stills & Nash [Import]

Dropout

Brazil [Import]

Dvorak & Saint-Saens: Cello Concertos, etc

Christmas

Amigo De Cantina

Da Unhatched Breed [Explicit Lyrics]

Mozart: Piano Concertos Nos. 11, 12, 13

Emotion