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Haydn: The Creation

(sung in English)

Sandrine Piau (Gabriel), Miah Persson (Eve), Ruth Massey (alto), Mark Padmore (Uriel), Neal Davies (Raphael), Peter Harvey (Adam)

Gabrieli Consort, Gabrieli Players & Chetham's Chamber Choir, Paul McCreesh

Awards:

The sheer magnificence of the choruses that provide the oratorio's structural pillars has rarely been so effectively realised on disc. McCreesh also has an exceptional set of soloists. The...

Haydn: The Creation

(sung in English)

Sandrine Piau (Gabriel), Miah Persson (Eve), Ruth Massey (alto), Mark Padmore (Uriel), Neal Davies (Raphael), Peter Harvey (Adam)

Gabrieli Consort, Gabrieli Players & Chetham's Chamber Choir, Paul McCreesh

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44.1 kHz, 16 bit, FLAC/ALAC/WAV

$23.25

320 kbps, 320 kbps

$16.75

This release includes a digital booklet

Stream now lossless, 44.1 kHz, 16 bit

Awards:

The sheer magnificence of the choruses that provide the oratorio's structural pillars has rarely been so effectively realised on disc. McCreesh also has an exceptional set of soloists. The...

About

Contents and tracklist

Introduction: The Representation Of Chaos
Track length6:12
In The Beginning God Created The Heaven And The Earth - And The Spirit Of God
Track length3:11
Now Vanish Before The Holy Beams - Despairing, Cursing Rage
Track length4:06
And God Made The Firmament
Track length2:01
The Glorious Heav'nly Hierarchy
Track length2:16
And God Said: Let The Waters Under The Heaven Be Gathered Together
Track length0:38
Rolling In Foaming Billows
Track length4:09
And God Said: Let The Earth Bring Forth Grass
Track length0:30
With Verdure Clad The Fields Appear
Track length5:11
And The Heavenly Host The Third Day Proclaimed
Track length0:10
Awake The Harp, The Lyre Awake
Track length2:09
And God Said: Let There Be Lights In The Firmament Of Heaven
Track length0:39
In Brightest Splendour Rises Now The Sun
Track length3:05
The Heavens Are Telling The Glory Of God
Track length4:07
And God Said: Let The Waters Bring Forth Abundantly
Track length0:30
On Mighty Pens Uplifted Soars The Eagle
Track length8:10
And God Created Great Whales
Track length2:37
And The Angels Struck Their Immortal Harps
Track length0:17
Most Beautiful Appear, With Verdure Young Adorn'd - The Lord Is Great
Track length6:52
And God Said: Let The Earth Bring Forth The Living Creature
Track length0:23
Straight Opening Her Fertile Womb
Track length3:27
Now Heaven In Fullest Glory Shines
Track length3:37
And God Created Man
Track length0:48
In Native Worth And Honour Clad
Track length3:53
And God Saw Ev'rything That He Had Made
Track length0:20
Achieved Is The Glorious Work
Track length9:43
In Rosy Mantle Now Appears
Track length4:22
By Thee With Bliss, O Bounteous Lord
Track length10:31
Our Duty Have We Now Perform'd
Track length2:15
Graceful Consort!
Track length8:03
O Happy Pair
Track length0:33
Praise The Lord, Uplift Your Voices
Track length3:42

Spotlight on this release

Awards and reviews

  • Presto Recording of the Week
    17th March 2008
  • BBC Music Magazine
    May 2008
    Disc of the month
  • Gramophone Awards
    2008
    Winner - Choral

May 2008

The sheer magnificence of the choruses that provide the oratorio's structural pillars has rarely been so effectively realised on disc. McCreesh also has an exceptional set of soloists. The results are exceptional; overtaking even John Eliot Gardiner's striking version on the same label.

18th April 2008

Right from the first notes the sheer scale of the drama is apparent, you feel the full force of order emerging from chaos and light from darkness...bass Neal Davies is particularly impressive as Raphael...If you're after The Creation in English, this might just be the one to buy…and the recording captures the whole spectacle with apparent ease, which is an achievement in itself.

2010

ceived The Creation as the first bilingual oratorio and would surely have been perplexed that Anglophone record-buyers seem to prefer the work in German. The main problem, of course, is that the Baron's command of English failed to match his self-confidence, prompting many attempts to improve on the original.
On this new recording, Paul McCreesh's emendations are less radical than those on the two other available versions in English (from Simon Rattle and Robert Shaw), but on the whole more successful, retaining all the Miltoninspired quaintness of van Swieten's text while rectifying his mistranslations and clumsy Germanic word order.
Language apart, McCreesh's recording differs from its period competitors in scale: where they typically use a smallish professional choir and an orchestra of around 50, McCreesh pits a 113- strong band against a chorus of similar numbers.
Abetted by the glowing, spacious acoustics of Watford Town Hall, the big celebratory choruses make a more powerful impact than in any of the rival period versions. Occasionally – say in the rollicking fugue in 'Awake the harp', here done at a constant fortissimo – one would have welcomed more nuanced dynamics. But there is no denying the incandescence of the climaxes to 'The heavens are telling' and the final 'Praise the Lord, uplift your voices'.
In all the choruses McCreesh's pacing – eager but never hectic – and rhythmic energy are wonderfully inspiriting. He is acutely responsive, too, to the work's mystery and awe, daring, and vindicating, slower-than-usual tempi for 'Chaos' (launched by the most apocalyptic of timpani rolls), the Sunrise and the first morning in Paradise, celestially evoked by the Gabrieli's trio of flutes. A pity, though, that he allows the cannonfire timpani to pre-empt Haydn's cosmic blaze at 'light'.
McCreesh's trump card is his solo team, superb both individually and as an exceptionally sensitive ensemble. Has the trio near the close of Part 2, 'On thee each living soul awaits', ever been sung with such radiant inwardness. Other highlights include Sandrine Piau's graceful, smiling 'With verdure clad', here a truly happy song to the spring, Mark Padmore's tender legato in Haydn's portrayal of the first woman, and Neal Davies's deep, velvet softness in 'the limpid brook' and his hieratic reverence in the sublime arioso 'Be fruitful all, and multiply'.
Peter Harvey, supple and lyrical, and Miah Persson, with a touch of sensuousness in her vernal tone, are beautifully paired as Adam and Eve.
For a Creation in English, this new version – exhilarating, poetic and marvellously sung – becomes the prime recommendation.

March 2008

In all the choruses McCreesh's pacing - eager but never hectic - and rhythmic energy are wonderfully inspiriting. He is acutely responsive, too, to the work's mystery and awe… The less consistently cast Rattle recording sometimes generates more fun. but for a Creation in English, this new version - exhilarating, poetic and marvellously sung - becomes the prime recommendation.

March 2008

While yielding to none in joyous exhilaration, McCreesh gives full value to the mystery and awe of creation. Unlike most period practitioners, he often favours broad tempos, whether in a wonderfully creepy evocation of the primeval slime in "Chaos" or the most majestic of sunrises... If you want a Creation in English, this new version - sonically thrilling, marvellously sung and characterised - sweeps the field.

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