Naive: V5091
Dvorak - Stabat Mater (Original version for Soloists, Choir, & Piano)
Our Price: £11.95 (£10.17 ex VAT)
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Vocal/Choral
Artist(s): Alexandra Coku (soprano), Renata Pokupic (alto), Pavol Breslik (tenor), Markus Butter (bass), Brigitte Engerer (piano), Accentus
Conductor(s): Laurence Equilbey
Release Date: 28th April 2008
More Details on Dvorak - Stabat Mater (Original version for Soloists, Choir, & Piano)
For Dvorak, the Stabat Mater was a work brought about by personal tragedy of almost incomprehensible proportions when he tragically lost all three of his then living children over a period of three years. In 1875, his young daughter Josefa died at only two days of age.
The Stabat Mater is based on an ancient Roman Catholic poem that tells of the Virgin Mary’s grief over the crucifixion of Jesus as she is standing under his cross, and the grieving father began work on the Stabat Mater as a means of coping with his beloved child’s death. The sadness which Dvorak instilled in the piece was then compounded on August 13th 1877 when 11 month old Ruzena accidentally drank a phosphorus solution and died. Less than one month later, on September 8th, his 3-year old son Otakar died of smallpox, leaving Dvorak and his wife completely childless. They subsequently had other children but at the time their grief must have been overwhelming. The composer’s only means of emotional survival was by burying himself in his Stabat Mater, which he completed on November 13th of that year. The recording here is of the composer’s original version for soloists, choir, and piano. He later arranged the Stabat Mater to incorporate a full orchestra.
Critically-acclaimed ever since its first recording, the choral group Accentus has received numerous prizes from the music press for its CDs. Its recording of “Transcriptions” was a Grammy Award nominee in 2004, and its Schoenberg recording with the Ensemble Intercontemporain (2005) received a Midem Classical Award in 2006.
Founded by Laurence Equilbey for the purpose of performing the major works of the a cappella repertoire, and with a special interest in contemporary music, Accentus is today an ensemble of 32 professional singers which appears at the leading French and international festivals.
The Stabat Mater is based on an ancient Roman Catholic poem that tells of the Virgin Mary’s grief over the crucifixion of Jesus as she is standing under his cross, and the grieving father began work on the Stabat Mater as a means of coping with his beloved child’s death. The sadness which Dvorak instilled in the piece was then compounded on August 13th 1877 when 11 month old Ruzena accidentally drank a phosphorus solution and died. Less than one month later, on September 8th, his 3-year old son Otakar died of smallpox, leaving Dvorak and his wife completely childless. They subsequently had other children but at the time their grief must have been overwhelming. The composer’s only means of emotional survival was by burying himself in his Stabat Mater, which he completed on November 13th of that year. The recording here is of the composer’s original version for soloists, choir, and piano. He later arranged the Stabat Mater to incorporate a full orchestra.
Critically-acclaimed ever since its first recording, the choral group Accentus has received numerous prizes from the music press for its CDs. Its recording of “Transcriptions” was a Grammy Award nominee in 2004, and its Schoenberg recording with the Ensemble Intercontemporain (2005) received a Midem Classical Award in 2006.
Founded by Laurence Equilbey for the purpose of performing the major works of the a cappella repertoire, and with a special interest in contemporary music, Accentus is today an ensemble of 32 professional singers which appears at the leading French and international festivals.


