CPE BACH Symphonies
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Signum
Magazine Review Date: 05/2015
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 56
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: SIGCD395
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Symphonies Nos 1-4, Movement: Symphony in D major Wq 183/1 |
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment Rebecca Miller, Conductor |
(6) Sinfonias, Movement: A |
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment Rebecca Miller, Conductor |
(6) Sinfonias, Movement: B minor |
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment Rebecca Miller, Conductor |
Symphonies Nos 1-4, Movement: Symphony in F Wq183/3 |
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment Rebecca Miller, Conductor |
Sinfonia |
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Composer Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment Rebecca Miller, Conductor |
Author: Richard Wigmore
Galant decorum simply won’t do in CPE. Not that the OAE needed reminding in these vividly recorded performances from the Queen Elizabeth Hall. Under Rebecca Miller’s inspiriting direction, the crack players tear into the fast movements with disciplined craziness. In the two Hamburg symphonies with wind (Wq183), the orchestra’s tigerish attack and cumulative energy eclipse even the performances they recorded with Gustav Leonhardt in the 1990s (now on Warner Classics, 8/90). The players make you unusually aware of the tense contrapuntal friction between violins and basses, the latter both weighty and athletic. Horns glint and holler through the manic, seething tuttis; flutes and oboes proffer glimpses of precarious calm.
The two Hamburg string symphonies (Wq182) are just as exciting. Antiphonal violins spar edgily, offset by fleeting moments of yearning lyricism. I can’t recall hearing such a viscerally thrilling performance of the finale of the B minor (No 5), with its firestorms and grinding, wailing suspensions. But these performances are not all about seismic shocks. Miller and the players think long, ratcheting up the tension towards Bach’s cadences. And they are closely attuned to the dark, febrile beauty of the slow movements, whether in the long, singing lines, eloquently shaped, of the B minor Symphony’s Larghetto or the shrouded viola-cello duet in the F major (Wq183/3). If you’re still a CPE novice, I can’t think of a better introduction to his brand of inspired eccentricity than these terrific, high-octane performances, live in every sense.
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