JS BACH Trumpet Concertos (Matthias Höfs)
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Johann Sebastian Bach, Bach/Vivaldi
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Berlin Classics
Magazine Review Date: 12/2019
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 52
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 0301305BC

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Concerto in the Italian style, 'Italian Concerto' |
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie, Bremen Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer Matthias Höfs, Trumpet |
Concerto for Oboe and Strings |
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie, Bremen Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer Matthias Höfs, Trumpet |
Concerto for Organ and Strings |
Bach/Vivaldi, Composer
Bach/Vivaldi, Composer Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie, Bremen Matthias Höfs, Trumpet |
Concerto for Oboe, Violin and Strings |
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie, Bremen Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer Matthias Höfs, Trumpet |
Keyboard Concerto after Vivaldi |
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie, Bremen Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer Matthias Höfs, Trumpet |
Concerto (after Marcello) |
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie, Bremen Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer Matthias Höfs, Trumpet |
Author: Jonathan Freeman-Attwood
Here Höfs resists the temptation of a compendium of movements (apart from the isolated first movement of the Italian Concerto), which allows one to listen with more ambitious ears as to the effectiveness of a complete reworked concerto. The G minor (BWV1056), often played by flautists, is a total delight in this regard, articulated with supreme control and good taste. Both the D major Concerto (BWV972), transcribed by Bach for solo keyboard from Vivaldi’s L’estro armonico, and the composer’s version of Marcello’s Oboe Concerto (BWV974), have become staples for trumpet recitalists in recent years. Höfs’s personal signature has long been famously impressed on the former with a DVD concert at St Thomas’s, Leipzig, recorded with German Brass back in 2009. If less beguilingly played here, the last movement has even more vim and ‘tempesta’, the quicksilver tonguing propelled by a thrillingly visceral bassoon continuo.
André’s best concerto recordings were often illuminated by exceptional chamber orchestras, whether Jörg Faerber in Württemberg or Neville Marriner’s Academy of St Martin in the Fields, and the same is true here, with the trumpet sitting primus inter pares within the stylish playing of the Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen. The only difference is where Höfs resorts to the geometric at the expense of the poetic; how one longs for a broader tempo to carry the glorious curvature of the Adagio of the D minor Double Concerto (BWV1060).
The trade-off for designer precision, homogeneity, elegance and evenness of tone is that there’s generally less scope for variety of colour, sound and character, or the kind of eye-watering beauty and spontaneity which ensure that André still remains nonpareil. Nevertheless, one cannot but deeply admire Matthias Höfs’s dazzling brilliance in these finely chiselled performances.
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