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Johann Sebastian BACH
(1685-1750)
Orchestral Suite no.2 in B minor, BWV 1067 [19:37]
Concerto in A, for oboe d'amore (reconstructed from BWV 1055) [13:45]
Concerto in C minor, for oboe & violin (reconstructed from BWV
1060) [14:16]
Concerto in D minor, for 2 violins, BWV 1043 [15:33]
'Brandenburg' Concerto no.2 in F, BWV 1047 [11:39]
'Brandenburg' Concerto no.4 in G, BWV 1049 [16:33]
'Brandenburg' Concerto no.5 in D, BWV 1050 [21:32]
Sheep May Safely Graze [from: Cantata BWV 208], arr. Daniel Pailthorpe
[4:48]
Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring [from: Cantata BWV 147], arr.
Daniel Pailthorpe [2:49]
London Conchord Ensemble
Florian Uhlig (piano)
rec. The Music Room, Champs Hill, Sussex, November 2004 (BWV 1067;
1060R); October 2005 (1049; 1055R); January 2006 (1043; 1047); April
2006 (147; 208; 1050). DDD
CHAMPS HILL RECORDS CHRCD014 [63:19 + 56:48]
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On the face of it, this release seems to offer a standard selection
of Johann Sebastian Bach's most popular orchestral works. All
of this music has been recorded so many times before, often
in very high quality performances, that music lovers will inevitably
wonder what this release has to offer that the rest lacks. That
this is actually a re-issue of a 2006 Quartz CD hardly adds
to its case.
But what makes this double disc stand out, besides the impeccable,
not-for-profit ethic of Champs Hill Records, is the fact that
these are performances of chamber music. According to
London Conchord flautist Daniel Pailthorpe, in his foreword:
"There is nothing in the autographs of these works to suggest
that Bach intended anything other than one player to a part."
London Conchord's instruments are modern - especially, of course,
the piano for the 'Brandenburg' Concerto no.5. Purists may blanch
at this, in particular at Florian Uhlig's decidedly inauthentic
use of piano and forte contrasts unavailable to any harpsichordist.
They may also frown at the horn replacing the trumpet in the
Second Concerto - though this was probably sanctioned by Bach
- and the flutes standing in for recorders in the Fourth Concerto.
Yet the small ensemble offers textures that are so much more
Baroque than the thick, vibrato-heavy orchestral versions that
were in vogue until not too long ago, and Bach's amazing counterpoint
is all the more transparent. Period practice has in any case
been more or less adhered to, and there really is very little
in this release to polarise opinion in the way that, say, Glenn
Gould's (in)famous 1955 recording of the 'Goldberg' Variations
does.
Among the many highlights of these recordings are the revelatory,
almost ethereal pared-down texture of the slow movements of
the Second and Fifth 'Brandenburg' Concertos; the golden light
cast by the flutes in the Fourth, especially in the glorious
finale; the dreamy central flute-cello duet of the Polonaise
of the Suite in B minor; and a gentle, heartfelt but not sentimental
slow movement in the Double Violin Concerto.
After the proper music, some encores: two of Bach's "greatest
hits" arranged by Pailthorpe, one delightful, one less so, but
in both cases beautifully played. The successful piece is 'Sheep
May Safely Graze', arranged for two flutes - both miraculously
played by Pailthorpe! - and cello, with the piano serving as
continuo. On the other hand, 'Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring' (this
woeful 'translation' lives on) tends a bit towards 'easy listening'
- perhaps deliberately so - with its deep bass, frothy oboe
and bland piano all squeezed into a pop tune sized chunk, reminiscent
at times of Jacques Loussier's abominations. Ideal for Classic
FM, though!
There are many fine individual performances among the soloists,
notably the oboe d'amore, oboe and three violins in the three
Concertos proper. Somewhat strangely, only Florian Uhlig is
named anywhere in the booklet - all the more odd because he
only plays in the Fifth Concerto and Pailthorpe's arrangements.
Uhlig's performance is certainly first-class and necessarily
virtuosic, and the piano lends a new, interesting colour to
Bach's Concerto - yet it would be wilful to deny that some of
the chromatic brilliance and visceral excitement that only the
harpsichord can provide is lost from the massive cadenza, and
overall the tone of the piano ironically serves to accentuate
the soloist pretensions of the flute and violin, pace the booklet
notes which repeat the platitude that "this has been called
the first ever keyboard concerto."
The recordings took place over a period of eighteen months,
so some variation is to be expected in both the playing and
sound. The Suite (or Ouverture, as Bach called it) in B minor
has a slightly poorer definition, and there is a minor tendency
towards flatness of sound in the piano perhaps, but in general,
the reliable acoustic of the Champs Hill Music Room ensures
a consistently high quality of recording. The only technical
blip is a suspicion of an editing join towards the end of "Jesu,
Joy of Man's Desiring", but that is no great loss to music.
The booklet is fairly attractive, in the Champs Hill Records
house style. The briefish notes are by Sandy Burnett, described
as "Presenter, BBC Radio 3" - wishful thinking that will remind
many of better days at that station. Burnett has certainly not
gone for a scholarly approach, and occasionally shies away from
facts - to describe the 'Brandenburg' Concertos as "part of
a failed job application" is as daft as it is inaccurate.
Byzantion
Collected reviews and contact at reviews.gramma.co.uk
see also review by Oleg
Ledeniov
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