ERIC SAMS:
RECORD
REVIEWS
Mendelssohn:
Paulus.
Soloists/Boys’ Choir “Wuppertale Kurrende” and Düsseldorf Musikverein
Chorus/Düsseldorf SO/ Frühbeck de Burgos; HMV
In
the gospel according to Bernard Shaw,
St
Paul
figures as “the eternal enemy of woman”. Mendelssohn helped her to
fight back, by giving the Lord the voice of a lady, while Jesus is
mystically represented by a female quartet. It seems fitting that the
soprano should take the top honours of these three records; Helen
Donath sings throughout with real feeling and distinction. The alto
of Hanna Schwarz though far less ubiquitous and demanding is always
effective. The men and boys are less impressive. Fischer-Dieskau
sounds suitably sober and saintly as Paul, but the unconverted Saul
seems correspondingly unconvincing. Werner Hollweg has the unhappy
foible of breaking the melodic line with stifled sobs, as if he were
performing in St Pauliacci. The boys’ choir struck me as
insufficiently sophisticated for the suave oratorio style; their top
notes sound strained, and their singing in general lacked clear
articulation. But if the tenor had had rather less break in the
voice, and the choristers rather more, the result might have been
wholly admirable. As it is, the unfailing grace of the orchestral
playing has a redeeming effect; and those with a taste for
Mendelssohn’s musical theology, with its typical blend of sweet piety
and bitter recrimination, oil and vinegar, may well relish these
records for that reason.
The
Musical Times,
Feb. 1979 (p.
131)
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