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Mozart
Mozart - Requiem
Mozart - Adagio & Fugue
Soloists; Scottish Chamber Orchestra Chorus
Scottish Chamber Orchestra / Mackerras

Linn CKD211

Release date May 2003

Mozart’s unfinished Requiem presents the performer with considerable practical problems. Although the completion by Mozart’s pupil Franz Xaver Süssmayr contains many infelicities of grammar, structure and orchestration, it was the basis for almost all performances of the work for nearly two centuries. In recent years, several notable attempts to improve on Süssmayr’s efforts have been published. Sir Charles Mackerras, in his new recording with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, has opted for Robert Levin’s edition, which seeks to “revise not as much, but as little as possible”. It is a triumph of creative musicology, and deserves to become the standard text for the work. Sir Charles catches the desperate nature of the inspiration in much of the Introitus (the part more or less finished by Mozart). The strings’ lacerating attack at the start of the Confutatis is typical of his approach. He is helped by incisive, punchy singing from the SCO Chorus, well captured in a clear recording with deep perspectives. The solo quartet, led by Susan Gritton, adds up to rather more than the sum of its parts; their fervent contributions in the Recordare are particularly affecting. Sir Charles has chosen to couple the Requiem with the severe Adagio and Fugue in C minor, a relatively early product of Mozart’s interest in the music of J S Bach. It is delivered with robust authority by the SCO strings.

Sandy Matheson