Lorraine Hunt Lieberson, The Orchestra of Emmanuel Music, Lorraine Hunt Lieberson at Emmanuel
Featured Album
A posthumous release from a cosmically talented mezzo-soprano
When Lorraine Hunt Lieberson died, the classical music world mourned as if Earth's mother spirit had perished. People wrote to their newspapers, telling stories of weeping at their cubicles while they listened on headphones to her arias. Normally hardened, crusty critics composed panegyrics, writing with uncharacteristic awe of her ability to stop time with her voice: a cliché that loses it force when wantonly applied, but one that nonetheless holds true for the unadorned, elemental purity of her singing. Simply put, she made you feel it — whatever heartbreak, longing, despair, wonder, joy or delirium might be lurking in the music, she summoned it onstage, in real time, often to overwhelming results. She herself would sometimes leave the stage in tears.
This recording is drawn from two different live performances; one from 1992, when she was still just Lorraine Hunt (she married composer Peter Lieberson in 1999). Conductor Craig Smith, who this release also commemorates, takes the Bach cantata "Kommt, ihr angefochtnen Sünder" at such a leisurely pace that it might produce gripes, and they would be justified if it didn't give Lorraine even more time to draw unearthly beauty from it. Think of it as an analogue to the exquisitely endless final movement of Mahler's Ninth, or those late Leonard Bernstein recordings when he deliberately slowed down all his signature works, as if to get one last good look at them before dying: this much time in the hands of a master is a never a bad thing. Another Bach cantata drawn from this performance concludes the disc, and her voice, which only truly revealed all its wondrous colors after she made the switch to mezzo-soprano from soprano, glows with dark, amber hues. In between, there are 13 Handel arias, works that move forward "like a godly machine, crushing all ugliness and plainness in its path," as Alex Ross once memorably put it. All this exalted language points to one, single truth — though many have tried, even some of the world's most gifted writers find themselves at a loss to describe her voice, and that is because there are things that transcend words. Before such things, music critics are helpless: all we can say for certain that you should allow yourself to hear this voice.