I confess that I am still working my way through the huge number of songs, which are quite an attractive surprise. Even more surprising are the operas. The set also contains four of Haydn's operas, including two of his finest, composed for his patron Prince Esterházy: La Fedeltà Premiata, composed in 1780, and L'infedeltà Delusa, written in 1773. Like most people, I have not paid much attention to Haydn in this area -- neither have record companies. Mozart eclipsed him in this genre. These excellent recordings show how very good he actually was. The vocal writing is a treat. These recordings are a major asset of this set but, alas, no libretti are provided on the CD-ROM.
I would say that the renditions of the great oratorios and the Masses are fine for an introduction, but they are somewhat dated Vox productions, and much better is available elsewhere. Only two of the final six Masses are here anyway and, since they are all masterpieces of liturgical music, one should get them all.
The Brilliant edition also offers the first recordings of all 126 baryton trios. These, I think, are only for the Haydn completist. They were written for Prince Nikolaus Esterházy, Haydn's patron, who played the baryton, a bowed stringed instrument with sympathetic strings that could also be plucked. While he was indubitably one of the music world's greatest patrons, Prince Nikolaus, on the evidence provided here, had limited performance abilities. I never thought that Haydn had written a boring bar of music until I sampled some of these trios. Others demonstrate his genius with limited means.
In any case, my overall verdict is that this Brilliant Haydn Edition, while perhaps not as overwhelming a bargain as the Brilliant Bach set, is still an inestimable treasure. I am far richer for it.
What are the alternatives? Naxos offers separate boxes of the complete recordings of the symphonies, the quartets, the piano sonatas, and the oratorios. These are also bargains, if not as dirt cheap as the Brilliant discs.
In the symphonies, Naxos uses seven different orchestras: the Capella Istropolitana (Bratislava) under Barry Wordsworth; the Cologne Chamber Orchestra under Helmut Müller-Brühl; the Nicolaus Esterházy Sinfonia under Béla Drahos; the Northern Chamber Orchestra under Nicholas Ward; the Sinfonia Finlandia Jyväskylä under Patrick Gallois; the Swedish Chamber Orchestra under Béla Drahos; and the Toronto Chamber Orchestra under Kevin Mallon. You will get smooth, soothing Haydn from Cologne; elegant, charming, and vivacious Haydn from Ward; and very well articulated and lively Haydn from Drahos.
Naxos does not follow the symphonies in chronological order, as does Brilliant, but rather mixes the programs. I find both the Naxos and Brilliant traversals very strong. You may be safely decided depending on whether you want one orchestra for the whole series and whether you wish to have the symphonies ordered chronologically -- or not. Either way you will be very happy. The Naxos box contains 34 CDs (8.503400).
You can also be assured of top quality in the Naxos boxes of string quartets, performed by the estimable Kodaly Quartet, using modern instruments (25 CDs, 8.502400), and of the complete piano sonatas, with sterling renditions performed on a modern grand piano by Jeno Jando (10 CDs, 8.501042). Naxos also has a superb box of the complete concertos (6 CDs, 8.506019). I find them generally better done than the performances on Brilliant.
Naxos offers Haydn's three oratorios on 7 CDs (8.507008). The performance of The Creation is excellent; The Seasons only a bit less so; and, the biggest surprise for me, The Return of Tobias, a huge three-hour work from 1775, receives a splendid treatment. The gorgeous coloratura writing and other choral glories in Tobias make this a real find, especially in this exciting performance. Yes, a three-hour oratorio is a bit much, but this is what the CD player is for.
In short, you can buy these Naxos boxes with complete confidence in their quality and value.
I cannot leave you without mentioning what is one of the single most exciting Haydn recordings I have ever encountered. Haydn originally wrote his masterpiece, The Creation, to an English libretto, which was lost. During the two years of its composition, Haydn said, "Every day I fell on my knees and asked God for the strength to complete it." A reconstruction of the original English is used in a new recording by Chetham's Chamber Choir, and the Gabrieli Consort and Players, under Paul McCreesh, on the Archiv label (477 7361). This is an original instrument performance, using the full-size forces that were employed at the 1799 premiere of this work.
The effect is stunning. If you have never shivered at the harmonically daring Representation of Chaos in the orchestral introduction, you will here. If you can listen to "And there was light," surely one of the most sublime and electrifying moments in all of music, without tears running down your checks, overwhelmed at the glory and goodness of the Creator, then you never will. The audience at the Vienna premiere went wild, picked Haydn up in his chair and paraded him around the concert hall. The dear man kept throwing his arms upward, shouting: "It was from Him; it was from Him!"
Indeed it was, and so much more. As Haydn wrote on his manuscript, "Laus Deo!"
Printed with permission from InsideCatholic.com