Mass in B minor BWV 232 (Thomaskirche 2005, Blomstedt) - 1/15

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Uploaded by on Jul 10, 2008

01. Kyrie eleison (Chorus)

Ruth Ziesak, soprano
Anna Larsson, alto
Christoph Genz, tenor
Dietrich Henschel, bass

Herbert Blomstedt, Gewandhausorchester & Kammerchor Leipzig

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Film & Animation

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  • likes, 2 dislikes

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Top Comments

  • after listening to it, i think my life would have been incomplete without having listened to it

  • Thank you for posting the entire Mass in B Minor. It's a wonderful performance of one of the truly great works of music.

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All Comments (20)

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  • -Excelente!! dirección, edición del video, con imágenes claras, nítidas, tomas justas y elocuentes, abarcando toda la ejecución del tema. Así también la

    calidad de los interpretes: orquesta y coro. Un deleite para los sentidos.

  • Thanks for posting this video very expensive. Very good, divine, like the sound of the notes of the Mass in B Minor.

  • Entirely wonderful - one of my life ambitions to experience the Mass live

  • @st105900

    but you have not yet held hands in love with a fair german lass on a hay ride in rural pennsylvania on a cool september's night. alas.

  • @KingJoeKong

    Clearly, you didn't quite understand what I was referring to. Bach was a protestant but this piece of music has often been described as one of his most 'catholic' pieces. From Wikipedia's page on this:

    At what point Bach decided to expand the Missa into a full-blown setting of the Catholic Mass is not known

  • This, and the Christmas Oratorio are amongst Bach's most 'catholic' works. The strict contrapunctual style of his other works seemt to be rather lacking in this work. It remains a mystery why Bach (a Lutheran) composed such a markedly catholic piece of music. Utterly beautiful!

  • After the first time i heard this, I sat there for a minute trying to believe what I just heard was real and that a human being could have wrote this.

  • I get to like songs after listening it 4-5 times. In this piece,

    1st time: "hmmmm"

    2nd time: "oh there is something nice with it"

    3rd time: "Whoaa!"

    4th time: "WHOAAA! WHOAAA! WHOAAA! "

  • It's not Richter, it's Blomstedt, you swinebrau! Richter died before this video was made in the Thomas Church. Great reading by Blomstedt, a noted Bach interpreter. Inspired and heartfelt playing by the Dress House orchestra and heavenly singing by the choir and soloists.

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