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War Requiem (Melbourne Symphony Orchestra) and Ian Bostridge (Melbourne Symphony Orchestra)

by
ABR Arts 23 June 2015

War Requiem (Melbourne Symphony Orchestra) and Ian Bostridge (Melbourne Symphony Orchestra)

by
ABR Arts 23 June 2015

‘Truth uncompromisingly told will always have its ragged edges,’ wrote Herman Melville. The truth about war, as Benjamin Britten ‘tells’ it in his War Requiem, is ragged indeed. A glance at Britten’s score is indicative – there on the page are the black skitterings of brass and strings, a motley percussion, a solo soprano voice soaring over Latin choruses that alternate (or intersect) with the tenor and baritone sequences of Wilfred Owen’s devastating war poems. Ragged, indeed – but ragged with intent.

The vehemently pacifist Britten rejected any triumphant hymning of patriotism when he composed his Requiem for the 1962 re-opening of the war-ravaged Coventry Cathedral. And his way with the words and traditions of the Missa pro defunctis is neither consolatory nor reconciling – no lark-ascending intimations of paradise. Yet the work is grand; it coheres in the way a great tragedy coheres, and with comparable impact. In Britten’s hands (and under Andrew Davis’s deft, experienced baton in this performance) the massed resources of orchestra, liturgy, chamber orchestra, poetry, soloists, and fluting boys choir all come together in a mighty, sombre interrogation of what we know and what we believe – or have been led to believe – about war and death. About resurrection? Maybe. Maybe not.

Comments (2)

  • What a wonderfully poignant and lyrical piece of criticism, one which is modern yet which also hearkens back to the tradition of belles-lettres. This is criticism which can be read and enjoyed for its own sake as well as for the sympathetic light it casts on its subject. It's hard to find pieces like this anymore. Most critics seem entranced with showing off their armoury of taste and discrimination rather than emotionally engaging with the performance. Well done, Ms Fraser. A delight to read.
    Posted by Anon
    04 August 2021
  • Alfred Brendal reviewed Ian Bostridge's book in the New York Review of Books and also praised him to high heaven for his sensitivity and interpretation. All of which makes me very cross (and jealous) as we never see these artists in Brisbane.
    Posted by Thea Biesheuvel
    24 June 2015

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