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Orff: Carmina Burana

The Europadisc Review

Orff: Carmina Burana

Jader Bignamini, Chen Reiss (soprano), Reginald Mobley (countertenor), Andrzej Filo...

£11.95

Few twentieth-century choral works have achieved the universal popularity of Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana. Its opening movement, ‘O Fortuna’, has become a cultural touchstone, familiar far beyond the concert hall, yet the complete score remains a formidable challenge for performers. It demands rhythmic precision, massive choral forces, powerful soloists, and a conductor capable of balancing spectacle with musical discipline. In this new Pentatone recording, Jader Bignamini leads the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, Audivi chorus, and a distinguished t... read more

Few twentieth-century choral works have achieved the universal popularity of Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana. Its opening movement, ‘O Fortuna’, has become a cultural touchstone, familiar far beyond the co... read more

Orff: Carmina Burana

Orff: Carmina Burana

Jader Bignamini, Chen Reiss (soprano), Reginald Mobley (countertenor), Andrzej Filonczyk (baritone), Audivi (chorus), Detroit Opera Youth Chorus (children’s chorus), Detroit Symphony Orchestra (orchestra)

Few twentieth-century choral works have achieved the universal popularity of Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana. Its opening movement, ‘O Fortuna’, has become a cultural touchstone, familiar far beyond the concert hall, yet the complete score remains a formidable challenge for performers. It demands rhythmic precision, massive choral forces, powerful soloists, and a conductor capable of balancing spectacle with musical discipline. In this new Pentatone recording, Jader Bignamini leads the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, Audivi chorus, and a distinguished trio of soloists in a performance that successfully combines visceral excitement with remarkable clarity.

From the opening bars, Bignamini establishes the interpretative priorities that define the recording. ‘O Fortuna’ emerges not simply as an exercise in orchestral and choral thunder but as a carefully shaped dramatic statement. The tempo is urgent without feeling rushed, and the massed singers of Audivi project the Latin text with impressive bite and unanimity. They sing with a focused, bright sound that avoids the heaviness often encountered in performances of this work. Even in the loudest passages, individual lines remain audible, revealing details that can disappear in more generalised interpretations.

The engineering, characteristic of Pentatone’s best releases, contributes significantly to this transparency. Taken from live performances in Orchestra Hall, Detroit, the recording captures the breadth and impact of the ensemble while preserving a natural acoustic perspective. Orff’s scoring can easily become congested, particularly in climactic sections involving full chorus, orchestra, and percussion. Here, textures remain open and well balanced. The percussion section, so central to the work’s rhythmic identity, is reproduced with exceptional presence and definition, adding excitement without overwhelming the ensemble.

Bignamini demonstrates a keen understanding of Orff’s unique musical language. Unlike many large-scale choral masterpieces, Carmina Burana depends less on harmonic development than on rhythm, repetition, and sharply etched contrasts. The conductor maintains a gripping forward momentum throughout the score, ensuring that episodes of lyrical repose never undermine the overall dramatic arc. His handling of transitions is particularly impressive. Movements flow naturally into one another, creating a coherent theatrical experience rather than a sequence of disconnected numbers.

The orchestra responds magnificently. The Detroit Symphony has developed into one of America’s finest ensembles, and this performance showcases its strengths. The brass section delivers the required brilliance and power while maintaining excellent intonation and ensemble cohesion. Woodwind contributions are consistently characterful, especially in the more pastoral movements. The strings bring warmth and elegance to passages that are sometimes overshadowed by the work’s more extrovert moments.

The soloists are a key factor in the success of this recording. Soprano Chen Reiss is especially effective in the higher-lying passages, combining technical security with a bright, appealing tone. ‘In Trutina’ receives a lovingly sensitive, poised reading that avoids sentimentality while capturing the movement’s intimate charm, while Reiss’s climactic contributions later in the work soar effortlessly above chorus and orchestra.
 
Baritone Andrzej Filończyk proves equally persuasive. His singing combines textual clarity with expressive flexibility, qualities essential in a score that shifts rapidly between satire, sensuality, and exuberance. He brings vitality and character to movements such as ‘Ego sum abbas’, relishing the theatrical opportunities without descending into caricature. The performance captures both the humour and the underlying humanity of the text.

Like Paavo Järvi on his recent Zurich account of the work (Alpha Classics), Bignamini opts for a countertenor rather than Orff’s specified tenor in the eye-wateringly high tessitura of ‘Olim lacus colueram’. Any puristic doubts are silenced here by the quality of Reginald Mobley’s singing, delivered with a combination of technical assurance and grotesque humour, as the roasted swan laments its fate. The instrumental colouring of the accompaniment and the choral interjections help to make this brief interlude especially memorable.

Throughout the work, the chorus demonstrates remarkable versatility, shifting effortlessly between ferocious declamation and delicate lyricism. In sections such as ‘Uf dem Anger’, the singers capture the music’s dance-like energy with infectious enthusiasm. Elsewhere, in movements requiring greater refinement, they display admirable control of dynamics and phrasing, and their a cappella moments are technically flawless. The contribution of the Detroit Opera Youth Chorus in ‘Amor volat undique’ (the opening section of Part 3) adds a special charm to proceedings.

Bignamini’s interpretation withstands comparison with the best among classic recordings. With the benefit of modern sound and all the thrill of a live performance, it combines freshness, rhythmic vitality and exceptional transparency with a punchy exuberance that is highly infectious. This account emphasises the score’s theatrical and kinetic qualities while never neglecting its moments of tenderness and reflection. Above all, there is a palpable sense of collective commitment: orchestra, chorus, soloists, conductor, and recording team appear united by a clear artistic vision. The result is a performance that feels both meticulously prepared and spontaneously alive. The music’s elemental energy is never in doubt, yet neither is its underlying (and surprising) sophistication.

Pentatone’s sound engineering deserves special praise. Dynamic contrasts are handled superbly, from whispered passages to explosive climaxes, while maintaining a natural concert-hall ambience. Listeners with high-quality audio systems will find much to admire in the recording’s spaciousness and detail.

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When audiences think of early nineteenth-century German music, the towering figures of Beethoven, Schubert, and later Wagner often dominate the conversation. Yet between the Classical world of Mozart and the mature Romanticism of Wagner stands a composer whose influence was both profound and transformative: Carl Maria von Weber (1786–1826). Composer, conductor, pianist, critic, and visionary dramatist, Weber played a pivotal role in shaping the future of German opera and helping define the musical language of Romanticism.

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