BBC Music Magazine

Maria Mater Meretrix

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Works by L Boulanger, Caldara, G Crumb, Dufay, Eisler, Haydn, Hildegaard, Holst, Patricia Kopatchins­kaja, Kurtág,

Lotti, F Martin, Victoria and Vogelweide

Anna Prohaska (soprano), Patricia Kopatchins­kaja (violin); Camerata Bern

Alpha Classics ALPHA 739 73:33 mins Anna Prohaska and Patricia Kopatchins­kaja have long shared a boundless curiosity when it comes to programme building, and Maria Mater Meretrix certainly throws up some startling juxtaposit­ions – none more so than the Stabat Mater that concludes Frank Martin’s Maria-triptychon followed by Hanns Eisler’s Kuppellied with its forthright lyrics by Brecht and earthy send-up of Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde. There’s method, however, in the incongruit­y, which sets out to explore what it is to be a woman, anchored by the example of the Virgin Mary and her ‘female antitype’, Mary Magdalen. What emerges is an ear-opening musical traversal of some 800 years touching on Walther von der Vogelweide and Abbess Hildegard of Bingen at one end, George Crumb and György Kurtág at the other. Central is the Martin Triptychon, but its panels are separated and spliced with works from Dufay and Victoria to Lili Boulanger under the impress of Fauré’s Requiem.

If the narrative trajectory sometimes seems a little opaque

(the liner notes assert that the ‘associativ­e links… are in no way directly associativ­e’!), the musical journey is compelling. Holst’s sparely-imagined ‘Jesu Sweet’ for soprano and violin establishe­s an immediate, almost improvisat­ory, rapport between Prohaska and Kopatchins­kaja that never falters across the album. Prohaska soars rapturousl­y in the Dufay Ave Maris Stella, and bestows a languorous gleam on the Boulanger. She and Kopatchins­kaja mine a blazing emotional truthfulne­ss in the undeserved­ly neglected Martin.

Only an arrangemen­t for strings of Lotti’s most famous Crucifixus feels like a misstep in an otherwise ingeniousl­y plotted project delivered with panache and unimpeacha­ble conviction. Paul Riley

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

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 ?? ?? Compelling concept: Anna Prohaska and Patricia Kopatchins­kaja traverse 800 years
Compelling concept: Anna Prohaska and Patricia Kopatchins­kaja traverse 800 years

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