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              CD: MDT 
              AmazonUK 
              AmazonUS  | 
            Machet die Tore weit  
              see end of review for track listing  
                
              Kay Johannsen (organ), Michael Aures, Daniel Kartmann (percussion), 
              Katarzyna Mycka (marimbaphone, vibraphone),  
              Handel's Companye Continuo  
              Stuttgarter Hymnus-Chorknaben/Rainer Johannes Homburg  
              rec. 2-5 June 2011, the Christuskirche, Stuttgart-Gänsheide, 
              Germany. DDD  
              Text included, no translations  
                
              MUSIKPRODUKTION DABRINGHAUS UND GRIMM MDG 902 1725-6   
              [65:41]  
             
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                  Christmastide is a great time for choirs. Concerts attract large 
                  audiences, and there is much repertoire to choose from. There 
                  is also a wide market for discs with Christmas music. This explains 
                  why several of such discs with the Stuttgarter Hymnus-Chorknaben 
                  are on the market. Its present conductor, Rainer Johannes Homburg, 
                  writes in his liner-notes: "Ever since its re-establishment 
                  after 1945, all its directors have presented recordings for 
                  Advent and Christmas."  
                     
                  This choir may not be one of the world's most famous choirs 
                  of boys and men. It has built up a good reputation, in particular 
                  among its former conductor, Gerhard Wilhelm (1918-2009), who 
                  retired in 1987. This disc bears witness to the choir's qualities. 
                  It presents an attractive programme of mostly German music from 
                  the late 16th century to the present time. One of the features 
                  is that the singing is stylish. By that I mean that there is 
                  a clear difference in the way the various pieces are sung dependent 
                  on the time of their composition. The motets by Eccard and Schütz, 
                  for instance, are performed with marked accents on the stressed 
                  syllables and basically non-legato, whereas in the motet O 
                  Heiland, reiß die Himmel auf by Brahms the choir sings 
                  much more legato. In a piece like Fürchtet euch nicht 
                  by Albert Becker, the treatment of dynamics is in accordance 
                  with common practice in the 19th century. The disc closes with 
                  the motet Fürchtet euch nicht by Johann Sebastian 
                  Bach, in which the rhythm is wonderfully exposed, even though 
                  I felt that the choir here is close to its technical limits. 
                   
                     
                  The qualities and the stylistic characteristics of this choir 
                  are such that this disc could have been really good. If ... 
                  the conductor had not come up with the bad idea of arranging 
                  many pieces, in particular the early stuff. These arrangements 
                  mainly involve the addition of various percussion instruments 
                  and/or marimbaphone and vibraphone. The programme opens with 
                  the 6-part Machet die Tore weit by Andreas Hammerschmidt. 
                  It is a mystery to me why it was thought necessary to add percussion. 
                  It doesn't make it any better; qiute the contrary. The same 
                  goes for the two motets by Michael Praetorius. If a choral performance 
                  was thought to be less 'festive', then the addition of period 
                  wind instruments, like cornetts and sackbuts, would have been 
                  a much better option. Although I don't know the original versions 
                  of the pieces by Walther Schmidt and Jean Clanché I can't 
                  imagine that they really need such instruments as marimbabraphone, 
                  vibraphone, crotales or congas. It is no surprise that the unarranged 
                  pieces come off best by far.  
                     
                  One more modern piece whose original I do know is O come 
                  all ye faithful in the arrangement by David Willcocks, here 
                  sung on the text Herbei, o ihr Gläubigen. It’s 
                  a Christmas evergreen in Britain. Homburg even decided to sing 
                  it in the English style, but that doesn't work, which is partly 
                  due to the German text. I am not impressed by the quality of 
                  the German translation anyway, but once again it proves how 
                  hard it is to sing music which is so strongly connected to a 
                  specific text. I have the same feeling here as in English hymns 
                  which were originally based on German music. For some reasons 
                  Willcocks’ famous descant doesn't sound as well in young 
                  German throats as in those of their British counterparts.  
                     
                  The genuine German pieces receive much better performances. 
                  A nice example is Magnificat peregrini toni by Siegfried 
                  Reda in which the organ plays the major role. The choral part 
                  is an arrangement of the melody from the Cantional (1627) 
                  by Johann Hermann Schein, on the German text Meine Seele 
                  erhebt den Herren. Carl Riedel's Kommet, ihr Hirten 
                  is an arrangement of a traditional melody from the early 17th 
                  century. The dynamic contrasts here are handled particularly 
                  well.  
                     
                  All in all, I have mixed feelings about this disc. I admire 
                  the choir's singing and its sense of style, and the unarranged 
                  pieces are done rather well. That makes it even more frustrating 
                  that the oldest pieces in the programme are damaged by arrangements. 
                   
                     
                  Johan van Veen  
                  http://www.musica-dei-donum.org  
                  https://twitter.com/johanvanveen  
                     
                  Track listing 
                  Andreas HAMMERSCHMIDT (1612-1675)  
                  Machet die Tore weit [1:55]  
                  Michael PRAETORIUS (1571-1621)  
                  Der Morgenstern ist aufgedrungen [2:40]  
                  Walther SCHMIDT (1913-1991)  
                  Zu Beth'lem überm Stall [2:27]  
                  Michael PRAETORIUS  
                  Den die Hirten lobeten sehre (Der Quempas) [5:51] 
                   
                  Heinrich SCHÜTZ (1585-1672)  
                  Die Himmel erzählen die Ehre Gottes (SWV 386) [4:07] 
                   
                  Jean CLANCHÉ (no dates given)  
                  Wunderbare Freude! Wunderbare Nacht! [5:00]  
                  David WILLCOCKS (b.1919) 
                  Herbei, o ihr Gläubigen [4:25]  
                  Johannes BRAHMS (1833-1897)  
                  O Heiland, reiß die Himmel auf, op. 74,2 [4:29] 
                   
                  Johann ECCARD (1553-1611)  
                  Nun komm der Heiden Heiland [2:56]  
                  David WILLCOCKS  
                  O komm, o komm Immanuel [4:09]  
                  Michael PRAETORIUS  
                  Es ist ein Ros entsprungen [4;20]  
                  Siegfried REDA (b.1948)  
                  Magnificat peregrini toni [4:44]  
                  Johann ECCARD  
                  Übers Gebirg Maria ging [2:55]  
                  Carl RIEDEL (1827-1888)  
                  Kommet, ihr Hirten [1:30]  
                  Albert BECKER (1834-1899)  
                  Fürchtet euch nicht [2:53]  
                  Heinrich SCHÜTZ  
                  Also hat Gott die Welt geliebt (SWV 380) [2:29]  
                  Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750)  
                  Fürchte dich nicht (BWV 228) [8:43]  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                 
             
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