Mozart: Exsultate jubilate!

Mozart: Exsultate jubilate! cover $30.00 Out of Stock
2-4 weeks
add to cart

W. A. MOZART
Mozart: Exsultate jubilate!
Carolyn Sampson (soprano) / Choir of The King's Consort, Robert King (director)

[ Hyperion 30 / CD ]

Release Date: Friday 1 October 2010

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

"This is a sunny and unpretentious disc which deserves to be among the successes of the Mozart year" Gramophone

'Robert King and his choral and orchestral forces give clean and direct performances in sound that is nicely balanced and benefits from the mellow acoustic of London's Cadogan Hall. The soprano focus of interest is Carolyn Sampson, whose musical sensibility and personality are exceptional … Unreservedly recommended' (BBC Music Magazine)

Hyperion's record of the month for February presents a Mozartian showcase for the extraordinary talents of Carolyn Sampson, and is also something of a rarity, the repertoire all dating the composer's time in Salzburg. Two Regina coeli settings (for soprano, chorus and big orchestra), written whilst Mozart was still only in his mid-teens, are extremely fine-but not so often heard and even less often recorded. This is superb music: triumphant outer movements and heartfelt, more introspective inner sections which find Mozart at his most ardent.

Exsultate, jubilate has, of course, been performed and recorded widely, but usually in the 'Milan' version; here we record the rarely heard 'Salzburg' version, which has a different orchestration (delicate flutes instead of oboes giving a very different colour) and different words. It ends, of course, with the wildly famous, virtuosic 'Alleluia'.

These three works make substantial pillars for the disc. But there is much more! A series of shorter jewels, including three of the greatest movements for solo soprano taken from larger sacred works: the hugely famous 'Laudate Dominum' from the Vesperae solennes de Confessore (which could be by Verdi, with its amazing soft chorus entry part of the way through), the utterly ravishing 'Agnus Dei' from the 'Coronation' Mass, and a cheerful and less often heard 'Laudate Dominum' from the Vesperae solennes de Domenica with a cheery organ solo duetting with the voice.

Finally we have a very rarely heard duet, Sub tuum praesidium, where, thanks to the wonders of technology, Carolyn duets with herself-surely no two sopranos have ever duetted more perfectly, and it is a glorious piece of writing.

Reviewing the concert prior to the recording sessions for this disc, Geoffrey Norris wrote in The Daily Telegraph that The King's Consort and Robert King displayed 'an unerring understanding of Mozart's sublime thrills' and that 'Carolyn Sampson produced pure streams of coloratura'.

Tracks:

Regina coeli K108 [14'52]
Regina coeli laetare [2'57]
Quia quem meruisti [3'28]
Ora pro nobis [5'38]
Alleluia [2'46]

Laudate Dominum from Vesperae solennes de Confessore K339 [4'18]
Sub tuum praesidium K198 [5'19]
Sancta Maria, mater Dei K273 [3'45]

Exsultate, jubilate K165 [13'42]
Aria Exsultate, jubilate [4'18]
Recitative Tandem advenit hora [0'48]
Aria Tu virginum corona [6'07]
Aria Alleluia [2'27]

Agnus Dei from 'Coronation' Mass K317 [3'35]
Laudate Dominum from Vesperae solennes de Domenica K321 [4'24]

Regina coeli K127 [14'53]
Regina coeli laetare [3'24]
Quia quem meruisti [3'45]
Ora pro nobis [4'44]
Alleluia [2'59]