Bach: Cantatas BWV170, BWV82. BWV159, BWV56, BWV211, BWV212

 
Bach: Cantatas BWV170, BWV82. BWV159, BWV56, BWV211, BWV212 cover
$30.00 Low Stock add to cart

J. S. BACH
Bach: Cantatas BWV170, BWV82. BWV159, BWV56, BWV211, BWV212
Janet Baker, Robert Tear, John Shirley-Quirk, Julia Varady, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau / Academy of St. Martin of the Fields, Neville Marriner

[ Decca Australian Eloquence / 2 CD ]

Release Date: Wednesday 18 March 2020

Should this item be out of stock at the time of your order, we would expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks.

Bach's cantatas vary enormously in scale and style, ranging from festal works featuring elaborate choral movements and large instrumental ensembles including trumpets and drums, to more meditative cantatas for a single voice and only a handful of instruments. The six examples gathered in this new Eloquence reissue tend towards the latter, more intimate vein of expression, but they also encompass stylistic poles defined by varying purposes as either a sacred exposition of Scripturalprinciples or a rollicking secular entertainment.

The Academy of St. Martin in the Fields was not yet five years old when, in April 1964, it was joined by John Shirley-Quirk in St. Paul's, Knightsbridge, to record the two most renowned cantatas for solo bass voice. Both Ich will den Kreuzstab gerne tragen and Ich habe genug rank among the composer's most profound contemplations of mortality, and singers of every voice-type have wished to put their personal stamp on them. Reviews at the time praised Shirley-Quirk's assured legato as well as his affecting identification with Bach's acutely sensitive response to text.

A little under two years later, the Academy and Shirley-Quirk made a sequel album, featuring another pair of much-loved English singers, Robert Tear and Dame Janet Baker. In Vergn gte Ruh' Baker sings hauntingly of the soul's longing for death, but to Shirley-Quirk is allotted the prize of 'Es ist vollbracht' in Sehet, wir gehn hinauf gen Jerusalem, one of the most expressive arias Bach ever wrote.

Dating from the early digital era, a pair of fun, sometimes satirical secular cantatas features the husband-and-wife team of Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau and Julia Varady, well placed to make the most of Bach's underrated sense of humour, and as ever accompanied by playing of natural and unaffected style from the Academy and Marriner.

PENGUIN ROSETTE AWARD: Cantatas BWV 170, 82, 159

'Shirley-Quirk has a dark voice of considerable beauty, and in BWV 56 he produces a good deal of lyrical, poetic singing.' - High Fidelity, February 1966

'Shirley-Quirk does some fine lyric singing [in BWV 159] and Miss Baker is in top form. She is equally impressive in BWV 170 ... and the sound is first-rate.' - High Fidelity, May 1967

'There's plenty of rollicking fun in these new performances of Bach's most secular of secular cantatas... The slender story is played for all it's worth. Aldo Baldin is a fine narrator, Julia Varady a defiant daughter, and Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau a magnificently heavy-handed, and heavy-footed, father.' - Gramophone, February 1983 (BWV 211)

Tracks:

Cantata BWV170 'Vergnügte Ruh, beliebte Seelenlust'

Cantata BWV82 'Ich habe genug'

Cantata BWV159 'Sehet, wir gehn hinauf gen Jerusalem'

Cantata BWV56 'Ich will den Kreuzstab gerne tragen'

Cantata BWV211 'Schweigt stille, plaudert nicht' (Coffee Cantata)

Bach, J S: Cantata BWV212 'Mer hahn en neue Oberkeet' (Peasant Cantata)