1. Requiem, for mezzo-soprano, chorus, organ & orchestra: Requiem aeternam 2. Requiem, for mezzo-soprano, chorus, organ & orchestra: Kyrie 3. Requiem, for mezzo-soprano, chorus, organ & orchestra: I Will Lift Up Mine Eyes 4. Requiem, for mezzo-soprano, chorus, organ & orchestra: How Lovely Is Thy Dwelling Place 5. Requiem, for mezzo-soprano, chorus, organ & orchestra: O Nata Lux 6. Requiem, for mezzo-soprano, chorus, organ & orchestra: The Lord Is My Shepherd 7. Requiem, for mezzo-soprano, chorus, organ & orchestra: I Am the Resurrection and the Life - Requiem Aeternam 8. Ubi Caritas et Amore, for double male chorus 9. Lord, When the Sense of Thy Sweet Grace, for chorus & organ (or orchestra) 10. O Light of Life, for chorus & orchestra 11. Jesu, The Very Thought Is Sweet, for chorus & orchestra 12. Let Peace Then Still the Strife, for chorus & orchestra
Customer Reviews of This Album/CD
one of the best Submitted on: 2009-09-12
I find this to be one of the best choral music I have ever heard. The music is beautiful and the recording is superb.
I rank it among the very best, like Handel's Halleluiah.
To hear it play is an illuminating experience, it touches the soul.
Buy it and run to the nearest player you have.
A fine recording Submitted on: 2009-04-03
This is a good quality recording of a very nice musical work. The soloists are superb.
Lovely Oecumenical and Diglot Requiem by L.D.S. Mormon Composer Submitted on: 2008-07-15
Those who are deeply familiar with the Mormon choral traditions in composition, arrangement, and/or performance will be somewhat less surprised than other listeners at the beauty of Mack Wilberg's oecumenical Requiem (to parts of the Romish Catholic text in Latin of the Missa pro defunctis mixed with other texts in English). Indeed, Mormon choral music and hymnody have flourished in both of the major Mormon groups, i.e. in the L.D.S. as well as in the (lesser-known, numerically less numerous) R.L.D.S./Community of Christ denominations (or, as many rather acerbically designate (whether justifiably or merely contentiously) the former as a pagan cult and the latter as a slightly off-kilter Christian sect). The texts which Mack Wilberg sets to music on this CD of his choral music include only two, both by David Warner (a frequent collaborator with Wilberg as author of words for his music), that, presumably, are by any specifically Mormon author.
The mostly gently flowing, memorably melodious style (often modally tinged as well as filled with imaginative chromatic harmonies) of Wilberg's Requiem brings to mind choral music of several composers of the Anglo-American choral tradition; coming to mind most readily for comparisions are, in their choral works, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Frederick Delius, Herbert Howells, John Rutter, Randall Thompson, perhaps at times Gustav Holst, Benjamin Britten, and (sadly neglected) William ("Bill") Schneeweiss. Wilberg's music, for all that, sounds fresh and genuinely inspired, often rapturously ethereal. In this work, it is only those sections featuring the male solo voice that seem to sag to merely tiresome declamation and melodic skimpiness, rather as Britten succombs to the same weaknesses in his often dreary solo vocal writing. (On the other hand, this difference, perhaps as intended, does lend variety of mood and pacing to the music of this religious work.) This is a pity, given that the male vocal soloist is the quite fine baritone Bryn Terfel; even in Wilberg's setting of the famous 23rd Psalm ("The Lord Is My Shepherd", set to the pre-K.J.V. translation of this text as found in the pre-A.V./pre-K.J.V. Tudor English Bible translation by Bp. Miles Coverdale and more notably in Anglicanism's traditional Book of Common Prayer, which incorporates Coverdale's Psalter), which Wilberg includes as a movement in his Requiem, has melodically barren music, which Bryn Terfel sings better than it deserves. However, such lapses are relatively brief. On the other hand, the solo female vocal movements are very lovely, indeed, and the music soars lyrically, as beloved mezzo-soprano Frederica von Stade so memorably sings it on this presumably premiere recording.
Of course, the Mormon (L.D.S.) Tabernacle Choir is no fluke among Utah choirs and choruses; those who know Utah's university vocal ensembles, the Mormon Youth Chorus, and many other superb L.D.S. vocal aggregations will know just how high the choral standard throughout Utah is. However, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir deserves its pre-eminent popularity and, among the discerning, well-earned reputation for genuine excellence; the Salt Lake City Tabernacle's famous resident choir here sings with its marvellous combination of natural (almost non-"classical"), unforced vocal tone quality matched with admirable choral diction, sure intonation and unanimity. Since leaving the stable of Columbia/C.B.S./Sony Records' artists, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in its recordings for other labels, among them Bonneville, Laserlight, and its own self-named label, has freed itself of Columbia's rather excessively bloated instrumental backing arrangements and unimaginative choice of repertoire. There are many recordings to this fine choir's post-Columbia days' credit, and this one is as recommendable as any for those who have missed out on them (as well, of course, for collectors who, indeed, long have had some or all of them in their collections!).
Wilberg's other works on this CD, devoted entirely to his music, are all enjoyable, with no diminution of inspiration from one of them to another, as there is briefly at times among the Requiem's various movements. My personal favourite is the mediaevally flavoured "Ubi caritas et amor", too sublimely lovely to be so austere as that description might imply. The Mormon Tabernacle Choir and the Orchestra at Temple Square perform them all admirably.
It might be advisable to be sure that the buyer take the precaution of purchasing this CD, if not from Amazon, where he would be able to take it back for exchange later, if necessary. The copy used for this review had disagreeably extraneous sounds at two points, once in track 1 and again in track 3; furthermore, on one of the CD players the discs within these same passages would repeat without going forward, but on the other CD machine there was no interruption of the music's flow despite that intrusion of unwanted noise. The sound quality, as such, captured at the recording venue (Salt Lake City's Tabernacle), is pleasingly vivid and sonorous.
Recommended to, among others, music lovers eager for discovery of worthy new choral repertory and, naturally, to the many collectors who make a point of seeking out various settings and concepts of the funeral music known, however loosely, as Requiem.
I will be singing this piece in 2008 Submitted on: 2008-04-22
I wanted to hear it on cd. Lovely work, very soothing. My friends wanted to hear it again and again.
Glorious Submitted on: 2008-03-30
I have long been a fan of Dr. Wilberg's work. Most people are more familiar with his arrangements, but this disc of original works is beyond words. The Requiem has some of the most gorgeous sounds possible, especially considering the humble orchestration that omits all brass but horns. The middle movement, "How Lovely is Thy Dwelling Place", is so hauntingly beatiful with Ms. von Stade's solo voice and TWO English horns. I love every facet of the music for this well-conceived masterpiece. The other pieces here are equally brilliant. I suggest this disc for any- and everyone. Truly awe-inspiring.