JS Bach - Famous Cantatas Vol.1: Muhlhausen 1707-1708
£14.20
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Label: Challenge Classics
Cat No: CC72897
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Vocal/Choral
Release Date: 12th November 2021
Contents
Works
Cantata BWV4 'Christ lag in todes Banden' (Easter Cantata)Cantata BWV71 'Gott ist mein Konig'
Cantata BWV106 'Gottes Zeit ist die allerbeste Zeit' (Actus tragicus)
Cantata BWV131 'Aus der Tiefe rufe ich, Herr, zu dir'
Artists
Barbara Schlick (soprano)Kai Wessel (countertenor)
Guy de Mey (tenor)
Klaus Mertens (bass)
Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir
Conductor
Ton KoopmanWorks
Cantata BWV4 'Christ lag in todes Banden' (Easter Cantata)Cantata BWV71 'Gott ist mein Konig'
Cantata BWV106 'Gottes Zeit ist die allerbeste Zeit' (Actus tragicus)
Cantata BWV131 'Aus der Tiefe rufe ich, Herr, zu dir'
Artists
Barbara Schlick (soprano)Kai Wessel (countertenor)
Guy de Mey (tenor)
Klaus Mertens (bass)
Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir
Conductor
Ton KoopmanAbout
The project is chronologically structured, so this first volume includes cantatas composed at Mühlhausen in the years 1707 and 1708.
This disc contains four great and well- known masterpieces which convey the mastery and maturity of the young Bach, aged 22 at that time. Bach's sacred music written before he went to Leipzig, including all the works from the Weimar period, are often lumped together as "early" cantatas. This is misleading and ultimately inaccurate, since Bach was already 38 years old when he moved from his post as Kapellmeister at Köthen in 1723 to take up his duties as Kantor at the Thomaskirche in Leipzig. In fact most of Bach's church cantatas date from the Leipzig years, as does the consolidation of the stylistic, structural and technical features of his vocal works, but even the repertoire composed before 1714 can hardly be termed "early". The works composed at Mühlhausen, demonstrating a striking sureness of touch in their conception, placed the 22-year-old among the finest contemporary cantata composers. Bach's earliest church cantatas are still clearly marked by 17th-century traditions. As well as the influences of older members of the Bach family, those of Buxtehude and Pachelbel the Elder, and Italian and French masters are evident, technically, structurally and stylistically. A particularly characteristic feature of the pre-Leipzig cantatas is Bach's exceptional delight in experimental and complex handling of an extremely wide range of instruments, with refined sound effects (such as the use of the bassoon) and poly- and homophonic settings and forms.
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