Bach Cantatas, Vol 17

Splendid New Year cantatas from the very earliest days of the Pilgrimage

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Johann Sebastian Bach

Genre:

Vocal

Label: Soli Deo Gloria

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 96

Mastering:

Stereo
DDD

Catalogue Number: SDG150

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Cantata No. 143, 'Lobe den Herr, meine Seele' Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Charles Humphries, Countertenor
English Baroque Soloists
James Gilchrist, Tenor
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
John Eliot Gardiner, Conductor
Lucy Ballard, Mezzo soprano
Monteverdi Choir
Peter Harvey, Bass
Ruth Holton, Soprano
Cantata No. 41, 'Jesu, nun sei gepreiset' Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Charles Humphries, Countertenor
English Baroque Soloists
James Gilchrist, Tenor
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
John Eliot Gardiner, Conductor
Lucy Ballard, Mezzo soprano
Monteverdi Choir
Peter Harvey, Bass
Ruth Holton, Soprano
Cantata No. 16, 'Herr Gott, dich loben wir' Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Charles Humphries, Countertenor
English Baroque Soloists
James Gilchrist, Tenor
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
John Eliot Gardiner, Conductor
Lucy Ballard, Mezzo soprano
Monteverdi Choir
Peter Harvey, Bass
Ruth Holton, Soprano
Cantata No. 171, 'Gott, wie dein Name, so ist auch Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Charles Humphries, Countertenor
English Baroque Soloists
James Gilchrist, Tenor
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
John Eliot Gardiner, Conductor
Lucy Ballard, Mezzo soprano
Monteverdi Choir
Peter Harvey, Bass
Ruth Holton, Soprano
Cantata No. 153, 'Schau, lieber Gott, wie meine Fe Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
English Baroque Soloists
James Gilchrist, Tenor
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
John Eliot Gardiner, Conductor
Monteverdi Choir
Peter Harvey, Bass
Sally Bruce-Payne, Contralto (Female alto)
Cantata No. 58, 'Ach Gott, wie manches Herzeleid' Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
English Baroque Soloists
James Gilchrist, Tenor
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
John Eliot Gardiner, Conductor
Monteverdi Choir
Peter Harvey, Bass
Sally Bruce-Payne, Contralto (Female alto)
Performed on the first days of the new millennium, this Pilgrimage volume has an especially candid coherence about it. These six New Year cantatas consistently speak of new prospect and a consolidated ambition to serve God’s purpose.

If trumpets predominate in the festive exulting of the first four cantatas, the forces diminish markedly in BWV153 and 58, partly because the theme of joy is startlingly checked by the fear of evil influence but, also, because Bach’s hard-working troupe would have been sung-out after a busy Christmas. The resonant Gethsemanekirche in Berlin is beautifully handled throughout by both Gardiner and his engineers.

Most stirring perhaps is the bold canvas of Jesu, nun sei gepreiset, whose energetic climbs (with, in the opening chorus, one exceptional break to wave farewell on the words “that we in prosperous peace have completed the old year”) are negotiated with exceptional bravura. Then, later, there’s a pastoral aria with oboe contours of shepherding solace that one recognises from the Christmas Oratorio.

If pickings are rich here, the “guardian” arias are most illuminatingly realised by James Gilchrist, notably in “Woferne” from the same cantata, whose piccolo cello circumnavigates the all-encompassing grace of the vocal line. Possibly even more beguiling is the conceit of untainted bliss in “Geliebter Jesu” in BWV16 with its stunning oboe da caccia accompaniment. Bach instils an innocence and trust here which Peter Harvey virtuosically sets up in the great solo nestling between the exhortations of the maverick aria-chorus, “Lasst uns jauchzen”.

The opening cantata, BWV143, may be a spurious work: there’s something of the apprentice about it. This could not be further from the truth in the concise masterpieces BWV153 and 58. In the former, there’s something touching about Sally Bruce-Payne emerging from the Monteverdi Choir to sing her cathartic “Soll ich meinen” after the mental breakdown of “Stürmt nur” (a fine “rage” aria).

Ach Gott, wie manches Herzeleid is given a slightly brittle reading here. Framed by two intricate duet movements, the intensity of expression in Nancy Argenta and Klaus Mertens’s account for Kuijken (Accent, 3/94) is still the benchmark. Still, Gardiner reminds us again here that his hit-rate is exceptionally high.

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