Label: Evil Penguin
Format: CD
Barcode: 0608917720129
Catalog number: EPRC 0015
Releasedate: 26-09-14
Format: CD
Barcode: 0608917720129
Catalog number: EPRC 0015
Releasedate: 26-09-14
- On a series of five CDs, acclaimed conductor Hervé Niquet leads the Flemish Radio Choir in new recordings of iconic Requiems
- The most imminent release in the series features the well-known Messe de Requiem by Gabriel Fauré (1888), which is recorded in the original chamber version with soloists of the Brussels Philharmonic
- Also on this new release; Two rarely recorded works of Charles Gounod: the Ave Verum, "Sept Paroles de Notre Seigneur Jesus-Christ sur la Croix"
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NCnO_HU7tQA&feature=youtube_gdata_player
Over the last 500 years, man’s mortality has inspired a genre of unsurpassed profoundness in Western art music: whether conveying fear of death, hope of life after death, or just solace for those who stay behind, the Requiem is at once the rawest and most comforting musical embodiment of the fact that life on earth is finite.
On a series of five albums, acclaimed conductor Hervé Niquet leads the Flemish Radio Choir in new recordings of iconic Requiems (by Brahms or Mozart), but he also delves into unjustly neglected music for the departed, such as the masses by Maurice Duruflé (1947) or Alfred Desenclos (1963).
The most imminent release in the series features the well-known Messe de Requiem by Gabriel Fauré (1888), which – recorded in the original chamber version with soloists of the Brussels Philharmonic – bears heart-warming testimony to Fauré’s desire to write “a lullaby of death, an aspiration towards happiness above, rather than a painful experience”.
Though nothing comes easier than eternal rest after Fauré’s lament, Ein Deutsches Requiem by Brahms – which will be the second instalment in the series – is worth a little longer sojourn on earth…
On a series of five albums, acclaimed conductor Hervé Niquet leads the Flemish Radio Choir in new recordings of iconic Requiems (by Brahms or Mozart), but he also delves into unjustly neglected music for the departed, such as the masses by Maurice Duruflé (1947) or Alfred Desenclos (1963).
The most imminent release in the series features the well-known Messe de Requiem by Gabriel Fauré (1888), which – recorded in the original chamber version with soloists of the Brussels Philharmonic – bears heart-warming testimony to Fauré’s desire to write “a lullaby of death, an aspiration towards happiness above, rather than a painful experience”.
Though nothing comes easier than eternal rest after Fauré’s lament, Ein Deutsches Requiem by Brahms – which will be the second instalment in the series – is worth a little longer sojourn on earth…
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1Messe de Requiem Op. 48 (1877 - 1893)I. Introitus – Kyrie05:51
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2Messe de Requiem Op. 48 (1877 - 1893)II. Offertorium05:56
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3Messe de Requiem Op. 48 (1877 - 1893)III. Sanctus03:04
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4Messe de Requiem Op. 48 (1877 - 1893)IV. Pie Jesu03:00
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5Messe de Requiem Op. 48 (1877 - 1893)V. Agnus Dei05:07
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6Messe de Requiem Op. 48 (1877 - 1893)VI. Libera Me04:28
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7Messe de Requiem Op. 48 (1877 - 1893)VII. In Paradisum03:14
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8Ave Verum (1853)03:14
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9Les sept paroles du Christ sur la croix (1855)Prologue03:32
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10Les sept paroles du Christ sur la croix (1855)I. Præter euntes02:16
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11Les sept paroles du Christ sur la croix (1855)II. Unus autem02:33
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12Les sept paroles du Christ sur la croix (1855)III. Cum vidisset02:05
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13Les sept paroles du Christ sur la croix (1855)IV. Tenebræ factæ sunt03:46
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14Les sept paroles du Christ sur la croix (1855)V. Postea sciens Jesus01:45
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15Les sept paroles du Christ sur la croix (1855)VI. Vas ergo erat02:12
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16Les sept paroles du Christ sur la croix (1855)VII. Pater, in manus tuas01:51