Search - Peter Kooij, Johann Sebastian Bach, Masaaki Suzuki :: Bach: Cantatas, Vol 11 (BWV 136, 138, 95, 46) /Bach Collegium Japan · Suzuki

Bach: Cantatas, Vol 11 (BWV 136, 138, 95, 46) /Bach Collegium Japan · Suzuki
Peter Kooij, Johann Sebastian Bach, Masaaki Suzuki
Bach: Cantatas, Vol 11 (BWV 136, 138, 95, 46) /Bach Collegium Japan · Suzuki
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (25) - Disc #1

The four cantatas on this release--volume 11 in the Bach Collegium Japan's survey of Bach's sacred music--aren't well known, even among Bach lovers. But fans probably will recognize some of the music: for example, Bach ...  more »

     
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The four cantatas on this release--volume 11 in the Bach Collegium Japan's survey of Bach's sacred music--aren't well known, even among Bach lovers. But fans probably will recognize some of the music: for example, Bach subsequently adapted the rollicking opening chorus of BWV 136, Erforsche mich, Gott, for the finale of his "Lutheran" Mass in A; the melancholy title chorus of BWV 46, Schauet doch und sehet ("Behold and see"), became "Qui tollis peccata mundi" in the Mass in B Minor. Surprises of recognition like these are always enjoyable, of course, but there are plenty of unfamiliar delights on this disc, too. For instance, there's an unusual format: two works, BWV 138 and BWV 95, lack the elaborate chorus that typically begins a Bach cantata; they consist mostly of passages of recitative (arioso, really) intercut with lines of a chorale melody in a sort of dialogue. A number of other nice surprises involve Bach's ingenious use of instruments. For example, that jolly chorus in BWV 136 features a bravura part for corno da tirarsi (slide horn), an instrument that BCJ brass expert Toshio Shimada reconstructed himself for this recording. The arioso-chorale "dialogue" in BWV 138 has a pair of oboes twisting their notes around the singers' parts like decorative vines; in BWV 195 those oboes join the tenor in a graceful aria as pizzicato strings flutter softly around them. BWV 46 has two recorders swirling through the disconsolate opening chorus; later on, there's an alto aria without strings or continuo--it calls for only those two recorders, with the oboes playing a "walking" bass line in unison. (By the way, countertenor Kai Wessel sounds notably more confident and less hoot-y there than in the alto aria of BWV 136.) Finally, more bravos go to Peter Kooy, who tosses off two coloratura bass arias with confidence and gusto. --Matthew Westphal
 

CD Reviews

Impossible to better this one.
Michael Pak | Binyamina, Israel | 03/20/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)

"One of the best cantata disks yet to appear. Have you listened to the pizzicato aria in BWV 95? ("Ach, schlage doch bald") Also, the greatest ever baroque oboe player, Marcel Ponseele is on this disk, who further raises the listening experience to awsome heights..."