Davis, who was famed for his genial nature and wide repertoire, began recording in 1974. After a one-off assignment for Decca leading the orchestra for an Ilana Vered concerto recording, he began making discs in 1975 for Columbia (CBS in England). This particular LP comes from early 1977, when the conductor was 32.
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The young Andrew Davis |
The Duruflé was clearly inspired by the Requiem of Gabriel Fauré, and is of a similar beauty. Writing in Stereo Review, David Hamilton described it as follows: "An amalgam of Gregorian chant, post-impressionist modalism, and a highly personal romanticism shaped by an unerring coloristic sense regarding both voices and instruments, it powerfully conveys reverence, tenderness, and drama."
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Maurice Duruflé |
Hamilton liked them both. While he called the composer-led disc "a unique and treasurable document," he added that "the new Andrew Davis reading on Columbia is a performance of wholly comparable merit, with more sharply delineated work by the soloists and choruses and impressive recorded sound."
The soloists and the choral work by the Ambrosian Singers and the Desborough School Choir were not universally praised, but Aprahamian was pleased: "Heard against [the] subtly coloured orchestral background of the New Philharmonia, the choral timbre is ideally liturgical. No disappointed Carmens among the chorus here, nor anything raucous about the boys' voices. Kiri Te Kanawa’s 'Pie Jesu' is impeccably beautiful in tone and expression, but the baritone soloist [Siegmund Nimsgern] is not guiltless of an operatic vibrato in the more passionate utterances of his part and not quite in the same class."
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Dame Kiri Te Kanawa |