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| Disc 1: | ||||||
| Song Title | Artist | Time | Price | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Play | 1. War Requiem, Op. 66: Requiem aeternam | Lynda Russell | 9:23 | Album Only | ||
| Play | 2. War Requiem, Op. 66: Dies irae | Thomas Randle | 27:46 | Album Only | ||
| Play | 3. War Requiem, Op. 66: Offertorium | Lynda Russell | 9:51 | Album Only | ||
| Disc 2: | ||||||
| Song Title | Artist | Time | Price | |||
| Play | 1. War Requiem, Op. 66: Sanctus | Thomas Randle | 11:04 | Album Only | ||
| Play | 2. War Requiem, Op. 66: Agnus Dei | Lynda Russell | 3:09 | £0.69 | ||
| Play | 3. War Requiem, Op. 66: Libera me | Thomas Randle | 23:06 | Album Only | ||
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For all the traditional text, this is not a traditional Requiem as even Verdi's was although he had little in the way of religious conviction. Owen's poems are the spiritual core of the War Requiem, the liturgical text serving as background. When the poet asks 'All death will He annul?' I sense that Britten's answer is 'Not likely'. Creation will not rise again to answer to any judge, and what we destroy stays destroyed. The nearest we are given to a pacifist's answer to the unsolved problem is in the lines addressed to the field-gun
Be slowly lifted up, thou long black arm,
Great gun towering toward heaven, about to curse;
Reach at that arrogance which needs they harm,
And beat it down before its sins grow worse;
But when thy spell be cast complete and whole,
May God curse thee, and cut thee from our soul!
Conductor, soloists and the Scottish ensembles cover themselves with distinction from start to finish. Speeds in some of the choral episodes are on the swift side, but that gives me no problem where the choral texts are something akin to a chain of linking recitatives. The soloists are worthy successors to Britten's own, the choral work is admirable and the BBC Scottish Orchestra is a fine band indeed these days. Above all, don't be nervous or hesitant about turning the volume up if you want to get the proper impact from the careful staging of the production.
Naxos - well done again, very well done indeed. There is not a recording of this great work that I know from any source, perhaps not even from Britten himself with Pears and Fischer-Dieskau, that I could recommend ahead of this one.
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