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 Description:
  Haydn's oratorio Die Schöpfung ("The Creation") recounts Genesis  via Milton's Paradise  Lost, translated into German and reworked into the finished libretto by  the Baron van Swieten. It is an intensely felt masterpiece, Haydn later saying,  "I was never so pious as during the time when I was working on The  Creation: I fell to my knees daily and asked God to give me the strength for  a favorable completion of the work." The music alternates thrilling choral  writing with moving solo parts, and bass Rene Pape and soprano Edith Mathis are  especially fine. Peter Schreier conducts the Scottish Chamber Orchestra and  Festival Choir Lucerne in this 1992 performance originally shot for video in an  unnamed but beautiful and ornate baroque location. The notes record that at the  public premiere in Vienna in 1799, a small book containing van Swieten's  libretto was given to each member of the audience "so that ever'body unnerstands  what the music wanted t'say." It is ironic that this release contains neither  the libretto nor subtitles. This is a musical drama, and the text is vitally  important for more than superficial appreciation, such that those unfamiliar  with the work may find greater reward in John Eliot Gardiner's 1997 CD  version.   The DVD contains a clean, sharp 4:3 ratio transfer from the original video  program with minimal evidence of grain. The sound is stereo PCM and generally  good, though in some of the more full-blooded passages the recording of the  choir is a little constricted and even harsh. There are no extra features of any  kind, though being Region 0 the disc will play in any DVD machine. --Gary S.  Dalkin, Amazon.co.uk
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