Bach: Cantatas Vol 3: Fourth Sunday After Trinity BWV24, 177 & 185 / Fifth Sunday After Trinity BWV71, 88, 93 & 131

Bach: Cantatas Vol 3: Fourth Sunday After Trinity BWV24, 177 & 185 / Fifth Sunday After Trinity BWV71, 88, 93 & 131 cover $40.00 Out of Stock
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J. S. BACH
Bach: Cantatas Vol 3: Fourth Sunday After Trinity BWV24, 177 & 185 / Fifth Sunday After Trinity BWV71, 88, 93 & 131
Joanne Lunn, Magdalena Kozena, Nathalie Stutzmann, Peter Harvey / Monteverdi Choir / English Baroque Soloists / John Elliot Gardiner

[ Soli Deo Gloria / 2 CD ]

Release Date: Saturday 22 March 2008

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

"As ever, John Eliot Gardiner's magnificent Bach Cantatas series eschews the big-boned, monumental approach to this composer of yesteryear. Here, in a really tremendous volume, is spiritual reflection paced to the fast-moving ebb and flow of life today." (Gramophone Recording of the Month May 2008)

Volume 3 of John Eliot Gardiner's celebrated series of live recordings of the Bach cantatas from the 2000 Bach Cantata Pilgrimage.

"John Eliot Gardiner's fast-emerging cycle of Bach cantatas, recorded live on his Bach Pilgrimage in 2000, is proving one of the most compelling extended recording projects of the age. Nothing is just ordinary. The opening chorus of Ich ruf zu dir, BWV 177, for instance, magically combines obbligatos for violin and two oboes, three poignantly interweaving lower parts and a dignified supplicatory chorale. Then there's the extraordinarily rich Gott ist mein König, BWV 71, with a penultimate chorus that seductively combines recorders and oboes, and the movingly penitential Aus der Tiefen rufe ich, BWV 131, a stunningly adventurous early cantata. Magdalena Kozena, Nathalie Stutzmann et al offer fine singing." TIMES (UK)

"Some hallmark performances in this array of Trinity cantatas. As ever, John Eliot Gardiner's magnificent Bach Cantatas series eschews the big-boned, monumental approach to this composer of yesteryear. Here, in a really tremendous volume, is spiritual reflection paced to the fast-moving ebb and flow of life today. As such, it always feels relevant and vital. And much of that stems from the fact that Gardiner's players and singers sound so utterly involved through every bar."
(Gramophone Recording of the Month May 2008)

The SDG's release of Bach Cantatas for the Fourth and Fifth Sundays after Trinity opens with BWV 24 Ein ungefärbt Gemüte, recorded in Tewkesbury Abbey as part of The Cheltenham Festival. A far earlier piece follows, BWV 185 Barmherziges Herze der ewigen Liebe was composed in Weimar in 1715 to a text by Salomo Franck and revived by Bach in Leipzig in 1723 and again in 1746/7. Strikingly different in mood is BWV 177 Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ, composed in 1732, a chorale cantata based on Agricola's hymn set unaltered and with no recitatives.

The second CD was recorded in Mühlhausen, where a twenty-two year old Bach took up his second professional post. It lasted for just one year, from June 1707 to 1708. This programme includes BWV 71 Gott ist mein König. There is nothing else quite like Gott ist mein König in Bach's oeuvre. No other work of his is laid out on such a grand scale in terms of its deployment of four separate instrumental 'choirs', set against a vocal consort of four singers, an optional Capelle of ripienists and an organ.

Tracks:

Cantatas for the Fourth Sunday after Trinity

BWV 24 - Ein ungefärbt Gemüte
BWV 185 - Barmherziges Herze der ewigen Liebe
BWV 177 - Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ

Cantatas for the Fifth Sunday after Trinity

BWV 71 - Gott ist mein König
BWV 131 - Aus der Tiefen rufe ich, Herr, zu dir
BWV 93 - Wer nur den lieben Gott lässt walten
BWV 88 - Siehe, ich will viel Fischer aussenden