JS BACH Christmas Oratorio
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Johann Sebastian Bach
Genre:
Vocal
Label: Challenge Classics
Magazine Review Date: 03/2015
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 139
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: CC72394
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Christmas Oratorio |
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
(La) Petite Bande Jan Van der Crabben, Bass Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer Petra Noskaiová, Alto Sigiswald Kuijken, Conductor Stephan Scherpe, Tenor Sunhae Im, Soprano |
Author: Jonathan Freeman-Attwood
This reading of the Christmas Oratorio exhibits many of Kuijken’s most compelling qualities with his quietly authoritative, steady and organic understanding of how these six ‘tableaux’, unified and discrete in one, form a uniquely patient and kaleidoscopic Bachian festive narrative. As ever, the embedded timbral refinement of the instrumental palette makes its presence felt at every turn, the oboes touchingly effective in their bucolic overtones, the strings articulated with breathtaking élan (and, often, with deceptively wonderful textural doublings and juxtapositions with the wind, as in the opening of ‘Und es waren Hirten’) and the trumpets without ‘modern’ tuning holes making a quite eerily timeless impact in their effortless virtuosity, especially in the elegantly consorting framing choruses of Part 6.
To understand what underpins Kuijken’s serious approach to Bach is to be reminded that his pioneering historical instincts are increasingly left to speak for themselves. The arias are often outstanding. Petra Noskaiová is always an arresting singer but she shouldn’t be allowed to sing flat in her great slumber aria in Part 2. The highlights include superb coloratura in ‘Frohe Hirten’ from Stephan Scherpe and Jan Van der Crabben’s beautifully lucid account of ‘Erleucht’.
Irrespective of historical evidence, the balance of one-to-a-part voices presents particular challenges, and it only takes one singer to be ill-equipped to wrong-foot the whole. Such is the case here, sadly, with a brittle soprano lacking the necessary capacity to blend (with either too much fast vibrato or none at all) and tune, the latter a problem further exacerbated by the struggle to negotiate the desirable roughage of the horns in ‘Fallt mit danken’. For all the many fine attributes in this new reading, this is enough of a drawback to place it quite a distance below the front-runners of Harnoncourt, Fasolis, Werner and, more recently, Stephen Layton.
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