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Kubelik: Schubert – Mass no.6 in E-Flat Major D.950 (FLAC)

Kubelik: Schubert - Mass no.6 in E-Flat Major D.950 (FLAC)
Kubelik: Schubert – Mass no.6 in E-Flat Major D.950 (FLAC)

Composer: Franz Peter Schubert
Orchestra: Symphonie Orchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks
Conductor: Rafael Kubelik
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Audite
Catalogue: AUDITE92541
Release: 2005
Size: 261 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: cover

Mass No. 6 in E flat major, D950
01. Andante con moto, quasi allegretto: Kyrie
02. Allegro moderato e maestoso – Andante con moto – Tempo I – Moderato: Gloria
03. Moderato – Andante – Tempo I: Credo
04. Adagio – Allegro, ma non troppo: Sanctus
05. Andante – Allegro, ma non troppo: Benedictus
06. Andante con moto – Andante – Allegro molto moderato – Andantino: Agnus Dei

When Schubert composed his last setting of the Roman Catholic Mass in the final year of his life, he was no longer a Catholic. Born in what was then known as the Holy Roman Empire, Schubert came of age in the post-Revolutionary era. After imbibing the Enlightenment’s lucidity and humanity and Schubert’s s own intimate encounter with mortality, Schubert fell out of sympathy with the Roman Church. Although Schubert tried in his final Mass to imbue the text with the same ecstatic energy of Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis, the music sounds more ironic than ecstatic and more disingenuous than candid. As a result, Schubert’s last Mass has been relatively rarely recorded and most of those recordings, no matter how grand and glorious, have always seemed somehow emotionally false.

One cannot accuse Rafael Kubelik of being disingenuous. As this 1968 recording with the Bayerischen Rundfunks Sinfonie-orchester proves, Kubelik was always entirely, sincerely, and scrupulously honest. Even in his celebrated Mahler cycle from the same period, Kubelik downplays that composer’s habitual intellectual irony for his heart, soul, and spirit, and this Schubert mass is cut from the same bolt of earnest cloth. Unfortunately, Kubelik is a victim of his own good intentions. The glory of the Gloria and the belief of the Credo are almost tangible, but never quite creditable. Even the outstanding singing of soprano Gundula Janowitz and alto Grace Hoffman cannot make the melodies sound lyrical and even with the superlative support of the Bavarian Radio Symphony, Schubert’s Mass still seems full of false sound and dishonest fury, signifying no real faith or belief. Audite’s super audio sound is, however, warm, honest, and true.

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