February 2004
De Profundis is the title piece here, a rich and dark composition for male chorus, organ, and percussion. It was written in 1980, as the composer was adjusting to life in Berlin. The Magnificat has proven one of Pärts most popular pieces. A work of serene character and lyricism, it is scored for unaccompanied chorus. Summa, from 1977, shares the quiet beauty of the Magnificat, though it is much shorter and compact in construction. Also from 1977, but revised in 1996, stands the Missa Sillabica, in which the music becomes total servant to the text. Even the pauses seem to naturally arise from the breathing pattern in reading the words. This is remarkable music and it receives singular performances from the 22-voice choir. The singers have a unity of sound that reminds one of Robert Shaws crack ensembles, though the execution seems even more effortless. Rich tone and transparency meet and marry in these readings, and the texts are easily perceived and beautifully enunciated in a natural manner. The recorded sound seems perfect to me. Recorded at the Chapel of St. Vincents School for Boys in San Rafael, and St. Stephens Church in Belvedere, both California, the audio never gets in the way of the music. The surround tracks subtly convey a sense of space without intruding on the front soundstage. Often voices seem to float in the air, as they do in a good church acoustic. The opening of the De Profundis, contrasting growling vocal basses with dulcet organ tones punctuated by drum beats, sets the tone to let one know this is a recording that will be entirely faithful to the music it serves. Everyone connected with this recording can be tremendously satisfied to know they have produced a very spiritual audio software title as close to perfection as possible in this technological world. GO BACK TO: |