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Bach - Mass in B Minor / Biller, Gewandhausorchestra

Bach - Mass in B Minor / Biller, Gewandhausorchestra

List Price: $24.99
Your Price: $22.49
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: I think that this is a good performance
Review: Although not a "authentic" one, I really like this DVD. I can't find many troubles in the choir as one other reviewer found - for me, they are very good (and I like all-male choirs in this kind of music). The orchestra is the Gewandhaus, outstanding musicians, in the truly german tradition. One minor fault for some listeners can be the slow, relaxed tempi choiced by the Thomaskantor. For me, only a matter of taste: this fact don't bothered me. A good DVD, with spectacular images from one of Bach's churches.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Poorly sung performance.
Review: From the opening Kyrie it's clear this work is beyond the technique of the choir. The boy sopranos and altos sing with poor intonation and feeble, unsupported tone. The tenors and basses fare better but their tone is what you would expect from such young singers barely beyond voice change. Views of the choir reveal singers sharing copies of the music! The orchestra and soloists are a cut above the chorus but the combined effect is less than easy listening.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A very special perfomance
Review: I must say I'm very pleased with this DVD.
I sing in a choir here and we are working on this Mass too, so I know how difficult are some of the movements, even for a professional group.
Sometimes I miss the nerve and the power of an adult group, but I really like the relaxed style to sing of these boys.
The solos are OK, specially the bass with a sweet voice and very warm for a bass.This man is an example to any beginner.
I didn't like the countertenor in all numbers, but I must recognize he has a very special voice even for a countertenor.

The orchestra is very good, in general very soft, but strong when they have to do it.

The quality of the images and sound is good.

Finnally, the context where this perfomance was recorded is a plus: the church, the grave of The Master, the participation of the Kantor, make this recording a very special one, that can be not so perfect in musical terms but deserves to be included in a good collection anyway.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: n/a
Review: i was just looking for the list of or what the dvd has.....
thank you.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: n/a
Review: i was just looking for the list of or what the dvd has.....
thank you.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: In glory of Bach !
Review: Recorded in 2000 at the Thomaskirche in Leipzig where the composer worked as Cantor for 25 years, this performance of Bach's Mass in B minor is a commemorative concert marking the 250th anniversary of his death. The conductor Georg Christoph Biller, holds the same post as Bach did more than 250 years ago. Since other reviewers did not point out any good elements for this performance I will try to focus on them. Although I agree that the intonation of the choir is not always perfect, this is not the only thing you should take into consideration for buying this DVD. The choir is an all-male chorus (and they are not professionals). This is perfectly acceptable for that era and they really try to do their best (which is very good indeed). The size of the choir though is much bigger than that anticipated in Bach's times. I do not mind watch them sharing scores. Some parts are tricky for them but I share their joy (and strain) in parts like "cum sancto spirito", "Sanctus" and "Osanna in excelsis". All soloists are good (especially Kaus Mertens, the bass). Instead of an alto this performance uses a countertenor (Matthias Rexroth), who is very good and adds to the authenticity. The Gewandhausorchester Leipzig is excellent throughout. Their forces are diminished as required by this baroque masterpiece, they forget their Mendelssohnian roots and never sound romantic, even if their practices are not totally authentic (their instruments of course are not - yes you miss the pleasure of valveless trumpets). Picture and sound are very good. Detail is crisp despite some minor edge enhancement. Instrument groups and choir are well defined especially in DTS (plain stereo is not bad at all). Camera work really serves the performance (bravo to director Robert Coles). The treatment is "orchestral" and the panning effects spectacular. This DVD exploits well the interior of the church. You see all that you want to see (at least I do), like Bach's organ, grave and the church he served as cantor. Orchestra and choir are placed up in the gallery. This adds to the visual delight and to a slight echo effect (the sound remains clear though). The audience is very quiet. The inclusion of anthems and verses between the various movements of the Mass is a plus (some are sung by the present cantor himself). I watched this DVD again and again. This is a large scale performance of the mass, but authenticists will not be disappointed. This is a commemorative concert. Bearing (at least) this in mind this DVD is a good investment. You want to honour Bach, don't you?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Visit to the Thomaskirche
Review: The first concert I attended in the Thomaskirche was to hear the Thomanerchor, Gewandhaus Orchestra and soloists perform the St. John Passion in 1996. Someone here has described the boys of the Thomanerchor as not being professionals. If they are not, it must only be as the result of semantics, since the boys leave home at the age of 9 to live, eat, sleep, travel and sing together until leaving school at 18 or 19 and, during the academic year, giving weekly performances of Bach cantatas and other works. It's not too far a cry from how things were in Bach's day, except that the boys are a very select group and live in better and honored status. They live an exhausting schedule of performances. Aside from the unique experience of hearing Bach performed (very well) in his church by his choir, it was impressive to be there for a mainly local event. The German audience packed the place, of course, and were absolutely silent. At the conclusion, they sat in stillness for several minutes and then slowly departed in quiet.

My last trip took me to the performance of the B-minor Mass, a duplicate of this one, on the evening before this DVD was made (and 3 days after hearing the St. Matthew Passion in the church). Again, it was very impressive. Bach's grave was "dressed up". The interior of the church had been renovated from the neglected, smokey darkness of DDR days to the whiteness you see in this production. (One can still see the old inscription on the ground level announcing that here, on such and such a date, Dr. Martin Luther preached the Reformation in Leipzig.) In that performance, it was the Thomaskantor himself whose intonation was less than perfect - a noticeable distraction. As others have noted, you do get a good idea of how the church looks. You do not, however, see "the Bach organ". That instrument disappeared long, long ago. What you see behind the choir is the romantic-era "Sauer Orgel". There is a new Bach organ (seen only in long views on the DVD), done in white and complete with his monogram, in the nave balcony.

The Mass was sung "in liturgical style" with the inclusion of the hymns and chants prior to the non-varying portions of Bach's work. It almost seemed that it was being offerred less as a concert than as a commemoration for Bach, since it was performed, to the day, 250 years after he died only a few yards away in the old Thomasschule, which no longer exists.

It may be that the performance on this DVD is not the most technically perfect version in existence. But, for my money, it is (and was) the most genuine performance I'm ever likely to see and hear. After all, it was sung in Bach's church, where Bach is buried, by Bach's choir, a most remarkable group.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Cum Sancto Spiritu
Review: This is probably the best performance on DVD that we'll get of the B-Minor Mass. The concert is given in St. Thomas's Church in Leipzig before an audience. The orchestra is small, and the choir consists of boys of various ages (that is, the church choir). The alto solos are sung by a countertenor; the soprano by a woman. The recording and the musical performance are good as any I have on CD (I have five). I've never before heard of a boy's choir singing the bass and tenor lines as well as the soprano and alto. I like the German practice of having boys in the alto since one can hear the contrast between the silvery flute-like sopranos and the woody 'oboe-y' altos. I prefer that to the countertenors of the English choirs. The conducting and singing is not as incisive as I'm accustomed to hearing from the various luminaries of the authenticity movement, but that's not a criticism, only a description. The church is rather plain so the camera mostly lingers on the performers.


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