Bach Cello Suites BWV 1007 - 1009

A jazz and gypsy-music violist brings his versatility to Bach

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Johann Sebastian Bach

Genre:

Chamber

Label: Zig-Zag Territoires

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 64

Mastering:

Stereo
DDD

Catalogue Number: ZZT051103

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
(6) Suites (Sonatas) for Cello, Movement: No. 1 in G, BWV1007 Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Jean-Marc Apap, Viola
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
(6) Suites (Sonatas) for Cello, Movement: No. 2 in D minor, BWV1008 Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Jean-Marc Apap, Viola
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
(6) Suites (Sonatas) for Cello, Movement: No. 3 in C, BWV1009 Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Jean-Marc Apap, Viola
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
(18) Chorales, 'Leipzig Chorales', Movement: ~ Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Jean-Marc Apap, Viola
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Terpsychordes Quartet
Jean-Marc Apap has a varied background in which jazz, gypsy music and Argentine tangos have played important parts; his performances of Bach on the viola are forceful, direct and informed by a strong sense of rhythm. In the Suites there’s an issue as to what bowing patterns Bach intended – the surviving sources are often contradictory. Apap, however, goes his own way, ignoring many slurs and making up his own patterns in other places. When he opts for separate bows, in the first three movements of the C major Suite, for example, what’s gained in vigour is lost in elegance and poise, and those passages where separate bows are clearly intended (in the Corrente of the C major No 3, for instance) don’t stand out as they should.

Apap tends to favour powerful accents, making little difference between strong and weak beats. Under this approach, the effect of the Gigues, and of the Minuets in the first two Suites, is almost brutal. Nor do the Allemandes give the expected impression of suave good breeding. The Sarabandes, on the other hand, have a noble dignity, even though Apap concentrates on long musical lines, rather than showing the eloquence of each phrase.

The three chorale prelude transcriptions for viola and string quartet sound lovely, as postludes to each suite (does any other composer provide such tempting material for the arranger?). They’re played with fine, clear tone and an expressive style that combines immediacy with restraint – the most persuasive tracks on the CD.

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