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Johann Christoph BACH (1642-1703)
Welt, gute nacht!
Herr, wende dich und sei mir gnädig [13:03]
Mit Weinen hebt sich’s an [5:23]
Wie bist du denn, o Gott [12:18]
Der Gerechte, ob er gleich zu zeitlich stirbt [4:15]
Ach, dass ich Wassers g’nug hätte [7:12]
Fürchte dich nicht [4:53]
Es ist nun aus mit meinem Leben [6:52]
Meine Freundin, du bist schön [24:12]
Julia Doyle (soprano); Katharine Fuge (soprano); Clare Wilkinson
(mezzo); Nicholas Mulroy (alto/tenor); James Gilchrist (tenor);
Jeremy Budd (tenor); Matthew Brook (bass); Peter Harvey (bass);
Maya Homburger (violin)
English Baroque Soloists/Sir John Eliot Gardiner
rec. live 16-17, 19 April 2009, Cadogan Hall, London
German texts and English & French translations included
SOLI DEO GLORIA SDG715 [78:11]
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Having issued many recordings of music by J.S. Bach, Sir John
Eliot Gardiner and his colleagues turn their attention to his
first cousin once removed, Johann Christoph Bach. Unusually
for an SDG release, the notes are not by Sir John. Instead the
extensive and excellent essay is by the cellist and viola da
gamba player, Richard Campbell (1956-2011). He took part in
these performances but died prior to the release of the disc,
which is dedicated to his memory. Campbell uses a wonderful
phrase, describing thus the influence of Christoph Bach on his
younger cousin: “one of the deepest tributary streams to the
great river of music that was to flow from the pen of Johann
Sebastian Bach.” It’s clear that Christoph’s music was highly
esteemed within the Bach clan. Campbell quotes the verdict of
J.S. Bach in 1735 that he was ‘a profound composer’. Christoph
Wolff, in his biography, Johann Sebastian Bach. The Learned
Musician, also carries this quote and adds a further tribute
by C.P.E. Bach, who called Christoph ‘the great and expressive
composer’.
J.S. Bach would have known his cousin well during his early
years. Christoph was organist in the town of Eisenach from 1665
until his death and simultaneously served its Duke as his harpsichordist.
In 1671 Johann Ambrosius Bach, father of Sebastian, successfully
applied for a post as a Town Piper in Eisenach – the presence
of Christoph in the town’s musical establishment surely helped
– and remained there until his death in 1695. Thus the first
ten years of Sebastian’s life were spent in close family proximity
to Christoph Bach and Christoph Wolff is surely right to suggest
that the older man may have been something of a role model for
his young cousin.
This collection of performances gives us a good overview, I
should think, of Christoph Bach’s vocal music and let it be
said straightaway that there’s some good and interesting music
here. The selection includes two pieces for solo voice, both
styled ‘Lamento’. One, Ach, dass ich Wassers g’nug hätte
(‘Oh that my head were waters’), is for alto and Richard Campbell
says it is one of the few pieces by Christoph Bach that has
received “extensive” performances in modern times; I believe
Andreas Scholl has recorded it. Here the soloist is Clare Wilkinson
and I enjoyed her performance very much. Her voice is warm but
the tone is clean. She sings with poise and good expression
and she makes a lot of the text – at the very end of the piece
her singing is appropriately dramatic and forceful, as the words
require.
Wie bist du denn, o Gott (‘Why are you then, O God’)
is a more extensive piece; it’s for bass, here the excellent
Matthew Brook. I was reminded while listening that a couple
of years ago I heard Brook as a fine exponent of the title role
in Elijah (review).
To be honest, though Bach’s is much more modest in scale it
requires a singer of sufficient calibre and range to undertake
Elijah – Bach’s vocal line extends to over two octaves. In this
performance, though the line goes very high at times, Brook’s
voice is cleanly produced throughout its compass – including
at the top – and he’s also equal to the challenges posed by
some ornate passages. This is a tremendous piece of singing.
Brook exhibits mastery of some difficult music and also projects
the text with conviction.
The track list suggests that we hear Matthew Brook as soloist
again in Meine Freundin, du bist schön (‘Thou
art fair, my love’) but this is a misprint. The bass soloist
is certainly not Brook; I’m sure it’s the equally estimable
Peter Harvey. This piece was probably written for a Bach family
wedding, possibly in 1679. Very briefly, the plot depicts a
pair of young lovers (soprano and bass) seeking a secluded spot
for a tryst. The man goes ahead and, after a while, his companion
joins him, accompanied by a pair of men: in this performance
a female alto and a tenor. The couple invite the men to join
them for refreshments and all join in a concluding hymn of thanksgiving.
We have all this detailed background because a copy survives
on which Ambrosius Bach wrote a detailed commentary. Very helpfully
SDG include this commentary along with the libretto; otherwise
I suspect many listeners, like me, would find it hard to follow
the action.
The performance is a very fine one with especially noteworthy
contributions from soprano Julia Doyle and violinist Maya Homburger.
Unfortunately, I find that the piece seriously outstays its
welcome. In particular, there is a lengthy chaconne section,
which occurs after the girl’s lover has departed and before
she encounters the two men – it’s at this juncture that the
violin part is particularly important. This section lasts some
ten minutes (4:35 – 14:20) and, despite the artistry of the
performers eventually I found it wearisome. A bit later, when
the lovers and the two men settle down to enjoy their refreshments,
the music depicts their merrymaking in exuberant fashion. There’s
quite a rustic feel to this section and it seemed to me almost
to be a precursor of Haydn’s Die Jahreszeiten. Sadly,
Bach’s music once again becomes garrulous and repetitive in
this section, I feel. Other listeners may disagree and there’s
much of interest in this piece, which is splendidly performed.
If only it had been ten minutes shorter!
This is one of two ‘Dialogus’ pieces in the programme. The other
is the opening item, Herr, wende dich und sei mir gnädig
(‘Lord, turn unto me and have mercy upon me’). Four singers
are involved here. The three high voices, who always sing as
a trio, assume what Richard Campbell calls “the everyman role
of the penitent” while the bass is vox dei. Brook is
the bass and sings with fine authority while the writing for
the trio is eloquent and very expressive. Bach’s music is inventive,
as for example in the quite sprightly dancing music for the
bass that begins with the words ‘Ich habe dich erhöret’.
Two pieces are styled ‘Aria’ but they are not, as one might
suppose, solo items. Both are for vocal consort and they are
well worth hearing. Mit Weinen hebt sich’s an (‘It begins with
weeping’) is a death-aria and its three stanzas refer to the
three stages of a man’s life – childhood, mid-life and old age.
Richard Campbell says of this piece that it “could be said to
deliver a masterclass in metrical word-setting.” The words don’t
make very cheerful reading but the music is sung most expressively.
The other aria, Es ist nun aus mit meinem Leben (‘Now
my life is ended’) is similarly a death-aria. Four of its seven
stanzas are given in this performance. In essence it’s a simple
strophic setting but it’s very beautiful, the more so since
it’s sung here with polish and gentle fervour. There is no word
repetition until the last line of each stanza is reached. These
are the words, ‘Welt, gute Nacht!’ which give the album its
title. These words are sung four times after each verse and
the third time the sopranos have a lovely little upward run,
which is most affecting. This piece is touching in its simplicity
and directness of expression. Gardiner and his singers shape
this consoling music exquisitely.
The programme is completed by two Motets. Der Gerechte, ob
er gleich zu zeitlich stirbt (‘But though the righteous
be prevented with death’) is an SATTB setting for a burial service
and Bach’s music seems to be most effectively moulded to the
words, so as to emphasise the meaning. Fürchte dich nicht
(‘Fear not: for I have redeemed thee’) is another SATTB setting.
However, the soprano line is deliberately and masterfully held
back (until 1:54 in this performance). When the soprano line
begins the entry of the voice is ethereal and it’s a genuine
coup on Bach’s part. I found that this music – and the
exemplary performance it receives here – put me in mind of Joshua
Rifkin’s one-voice-to-a-part recording of J.S. Bach’s cantata
Gottes Zeit ist die allerbeste Zeit, BWV 106.
This disc just goes to show what an extraordinary amount of
talent there was in the extended Bach clan. There’s much excellent
and fascinating music here, which deserves to be better known.
This disc should put that right and it would be impossible to
imagine Christoph Bach’s music receiving finer, more committed
advocacy both from the singers and from the small group of instrumentalists.
The performances were recorded live in concert though there’s
no distracting audience noise whatsoever. The recorded sound
is ideal: there’s good bloom on the voices and the balance is
excellent. The booklet is handsomely produced, as is usual with
this label. This is a noteworthy release.
John Quinn
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