Bach; Buxtehude German Baroque Cantatas

Highly accomplished performances of vocal masterpieces in the land of Bach

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Johann Christoph Bach, Dietrich Buxtehude, Nicolaus Bruhns, Johann Sebastian Bach, Georg Philipp Telemann

Genre:

Vocal

Label: Sony Classical

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 0

Mastering:

Stereo
DDD

Catalogue Number: 88697 22503-2

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Du aber Daniel, gehe hin Georg Philipp Telemann, Composer
Georg Philipp Telemann, Composer
Gli Angeli Geneve, Zoroastre
Gli Angeli Genève
Stephan MacLeod, Baritone
Stephan MacLeod, Conductor
Ach, das ich Wassers g'nug hätte Johann Christoph Bach, Composer
Gli Angeli Geneve, Zoroastre
Gli Angeli Genève
Johann Christoph Bach, Composer
Stephan MacLeod, Baritone
Stephan MacLeod, Conductor
Jesu, meines Lebens Leben Dietrich Buxtehude, Composer
Dietrich Buxtehude, Composer
Gli Angeli Geneve, Zoroastre
Gli Angeli Genève
Stephan MacLeod, Conductor
Stephan MacLeod, Baritone
Jauchzet dem Herren alle Welt Nicolaus Bruhns, Composer
Gli Angeli Geneve, Zoroastre
Gli Angeli Genève
Nicolaus Bruhns, Composer
Stephan MacLeod, Baritone
Stephan MacLeod, Conductor
Cantata No. 82, 'Ich habe genug' Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Gli Angeli Geneve, Zoroastre
Gli Angeli Genève
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Stephan MacLeod, Conductor
Stephan MacLeod, Baritone
All good marketing principles cast aside, Gli Angeli Genève have assembled five magnificent cantatas from contrasting 17th- and 18th-century North German lineages. If one can barely absorb the extent of Telemann’s substantial output, the less prolific Johann Christoph Bach (the elder statesman of the family whom JS particularly admired) and Nicolaus Bruhns remind us – as did Reinhard Goebel’s pioneering “vor Bach” forays for Archiv in the 1980s – of a refined late-17th-century expressive world in North Germany, which one wishes had lasted a little longer before the ubiquitous Italian monopoly.

Johann Christoph Bach’s steamy lament Ach, dass ich Wassers is now a celebrated concert work for countertenors, but often clammily accompanied and over-infused with pure operatic gesture. Projection comes in many shapes and forms and the suggestive, soft-grained rhetorical inferences in the delectable dialogues between the irresistible Pascal Bertin and the rich five-part consort convey a potent message of deep, “jeremiad” sorrow.

Such refinement extends to the full-blooded Jesu, meines Lebens by Buxtehude, whose radiant chaconne is effectively complemented by the jubilant roulades of Jauchzet dem Herren by the short-lived Bruhns. This is a magnificent, concentrated and virtuoso piece for solo tenor, sung here passionately by Jan Kobow.

Director Stephan MacLeod’s Ich habe genug (BWV82) is a thoughtful if fairly uneventful addition to the catalogue. Telemann’s Funeral Cantata is perhaps the greatest surprise for its remarkably affecting text-setting, lightness of touch in its scoring and supreme attention to detail, not unlike Bach’s own Trauer Ode, in colorific approach if not idiom. It is another wonderful work and Gli Angeli’s grateful account reaches the heights in the concluding chorus (is this and the preceding soprano aria as Bachian as Telemann gets?) with that master of the oboe, Marcel Ponseele, as beguiling as ever.

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