Bach, CPE Symphonies; Cello Concerto
Performances worthy of the burst of daring from the newly free Bach
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Alpha
Magazine Review Date: 4/2007
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 62
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: ALPHA107
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(6) Sinfonias, Movement: G |
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer
Café Zimmermann Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer Pablo Valetti, Violin |
(6) Sinfonias, Movement: C |
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer
Café Zimmermann Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer Pablo Valetti, Violin |
(6) Sinfonias, Movement: B minor |
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer
Café Zimmermann Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer Pablo Valetti, Violin |
(6) Sinfonias, Movement: E |
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer
Café Zimmermann Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer Pablo Valetti, Violin |
Concerto for Cello and Strings |
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer
Café Zimmermann Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer Pablo Valetti, Violin Petr Skalka, Cello |
Author: Lindsay Kemp
The six string symphonies grouped together with the Wotquenne number 182 are echt CPE Bach – if you wanted to demonstrate all that was remarkable and revolutionary about his art you need look no further than this. Composed in 1773 in Hamburg after he had escaped the restrictions of long service at the court of Frederick the Great, they are an explosion of expressive personality and daring which still has the power to shock and surprise, for which we have to thank that wise figure of 18th-century music Baron Gottfried van Swieten who commissioned the symphonies and encouraged Bach, as one contemporary put it, “to let himself go completely”. By turns angry, boisterous, mournful and humorous, the results stood alongside Haydn’s symphonies in showing what a dramatic and powerful vehicle the youthful genre could be.
A disc made up solely of these pocket-Herculeses can be a strong draft and Café Zimmermann serve only four of the six, breaking off in the middle for one of Bach’s earlier and more genial cello concertos. Their playing is alert and agile, and while a close recording reveals an occasional rawness to the string tone, it also brings an involving intimacy, clarity of texture and punchy energy. The Freiburg Baroque Orchestra (DHM, 4/91), using the same number of players, sound slicker and more “orchestral” in their bigger acoustic, but also more ponderous. Petr Skalka is a rather Romantically inclined soloist in the Cello Concerto, especially in adding a luxurious cadenza to the slow movement, compared to which Alison McGillivray is more silkily 18th-century in her recent recording with the English Concert (Harmonia Mundi, 11/06). For the sheer excitement of the symphonies, however, this new disc is well worth a hearing.
A disc made up solely of these pocket-Herculeses can be a strong draft and Café Zimmermann serve only four of the six, breaking off in the middle for one of Bach’s earlier and more genial cello concertos. Their playing is alert and agile, and while a close recording reveals an occasional rawness to the string tone, it also brings an involving intimacy, clarity of texture and punchy energy. The Freiburg Baroque Orchestra (DHM, 4/91), using the same number of players, sound slicker and more “orchestral” in their bigger acoustic, but also more ponderous. Petr Skalka is a rather Romantically inclined soloist in the Cello Concerto, especially in adding a luxurious cadenza to the slow movement, compared to which Alison McGillivray is more silkily 18th-century in her recent recording with the English Concert (Harmonia Mundi, 11/06). For the sheer excitement of the symphonies, however, this new disc is well worth a hearing.
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