Earlier this year I was very taken with Stephen Layton’s
recording of Bach’s
St John Passion (
review).
That recording was made with his other choir, Polyphony, and the Orchestra
of the Age of Enlightenment. Now Layton has recorded another of Bach’s
great choral works, the
Christmas Oratorio. I fancy this new recording,
though set down in Cambridge, is linked to Layton’s work as director
of the annual pre-Christmas celebrations at St. John’s, Smith Square,
London and, in fact, he’ll be performing
Christmas Oratorio there
on 22 December as part of the
28thChristmas
Festival. That performance will involve all the artists on this recording
with the exception of Matthew Brook who will be replaced by Neal Davies.
This isn’t the first work with Christmas associations that Layton has
recorded for Hyperion. I greatly admired his 2008 recording of
Messiah
with Polyphony and the Britten Sinfonia (
review).
For that recording modern instruments were used though the performance was
clearly informed by period performance disciplines. This new Bach set involves
period instruments and I’ll say at the outset that the playing of the
OAE brings great distinction to this recording. The ensemble playing is alert
and stylish - and sympathetic too - while the obbligato parts are, without
exception, superbly delivered.
The Choir of Trinity College is similarly on very fine form. Though the membership
of student choirs has an inevitable annual ‘churn’ this must be
pretty much the identical choir that I enjoyed hearing so much at the Cheltenham
Festival a few months after this recording was made (
review).
The choir made a splendid impression in Cheltenham, as they do here. Right
from the opening chorus of Cantata I one notes clarity and vigour in their
singing as well as evident engagement with and enjoyment of the music they
have to sing. They are equally good elsewhere: spirited, for example, in ‘Ehre
sei Gott in der Höhe’ (Cantata II) and crisp and incisive in ‘Ehre
sei dir, Gott, gesungen’ at the start of Cantata V. I also liked very
much the grace and expressiveness they bring to ‘Fallt mit Danken, fallt
mit Loben’, the opening chorus of Cantata IV. Equally admirable here
is Stephen Layton’s pacing, which seems to me to be well-nigh ideal,
imparting a delightful lilt to the music - and the pair of horns make a gratifying
addition to the instrumental palette.
So, this set ticks all the boxes so far in terms of chorus and orchestra;
what of the soloists?
I have a preference for a female alto in this work; perhaps it’s on
account of the nature of the words that Bach sets. However, Iestyn Davies
swiftly banishes such a prejudice. He was an outstanding member of Layton’s
solo teams in both the
St John Passion and
Messiah recordings
and once again his singing gives great pleasure here
. I like his tasteful
ornamentation in the da capo section of ‘Bereite dich, Zion’ (Cantata
I) and he gives a delectable account of the heavenly ‘Schlafe, mein
Liebster, genieβe der Ruh’’ (Cantata II). For years my yardstick
version of
Christmas Oratorio has been John Eliot Gardiner’s
1987 recording. In this particular aria Gardiner is appreciably swifter than
Layton, taking 9:20 against Layton’s 10:47. In many ways I still like
Gardiner’s approach to the aria but it
is a lullaby, after all
and that’s how it sounds from Davies and Layton. Everything Davies does
in this performance is classy, including his work in recitative: sample, for
example, his expressive way with the recitative in Cantata V, ‘Wo ist
der neugeborne König des Jüden?’
Katherine Watson has virtually nothing to do before Cantata IV other than
a brief appearance as an Angel. On her first significant appearance, in the
‘Echo’ aria, she makes a very favourable impression, singing engagingly
and with winning tone. The echo effect is well managed, too; Rachel Ambrose
Evans, a choir member, sings her little interjections very nicely and the
distancing on her voice is well captured by the engineers. Later on, Miss
Watson gives a very good account of ‘Nur ein Wink’ and is very
involving in the preceding recitative (Cantata VI). Overall, I enjoyed her
contribution very much.
Matthew Brook, an experienced Bach singer, not least with the Monteverdi Choir,
is on fine form. He’s clear and authoritative in ‘Groβer
Herr, o starker König’ (Cantata I), brilliantly supported by David
Blackadders’s silvery trumpet. In Cantata V I admired his excellent
legato line and firm, rounded tone in ‘Erleucht auch meine finstre Sinnen’.
Here, as elsewhere, his words are clearly enunciated - a virtue shared by
his fellow soloists - and that enunciation is also in evidence in his very
good recitative work.
James Gilchrist is an admirable choice as the Evangelist. He’s a seasoned
Bach singer and I well recall his several contributions to Gardiner’s
Bach Cantata Pilgrimage. Indeed, Gilchrist supplied what was for me one of
the true high water mark moments of the entire project with his spellbinding
singing of the affecting aria ‘Bleibt, ihr Engel, bleibt bei mir!’
in Cantata BWV19 (
review).
The Evangelist’s role in
Christmas Oratorio requires a very different
approach to the dramatic, urgent style that’s appropriate to so much
of the narration in the Passions. Here the singer is telling a gentler, kinder
story, Gilchrist is fully attuned to the style and to the music and I found
his narration beautifully nuanced, sensitive and characterful. The sheer sound
of his voice is very pleasing. He’s also conspicuously successful in
the arias, not least in the tongue-twisting ‘Ich will nur dir zu Ehren
leben’ (Cantata IV) in which he’s partnered by two sprightly violins.
Gilchrist is nimble and sure-footed in the aria’s demanding passagework.
I also enjoyed his lively rendition of ‘Nun mögt ihr stolzen Feinde
schreken’ (Cantata VI).
Presiding over everything and moulding all these excellent performances into
a cohesive whole is Stephen Layton. I find his direction highly convincing.
Just once or twice I wondered about a tempo selection - the very first chorale
in Cantata I is a little too steady for my taste - but time and again I felt
that his pacing of a chorale or an aria was ideally judged. He ensures that
the celebratory side of this wonderful work is given full value yet he’s
equally successful with the crucial reflective side of things. I was moved
by the performance but also I
enjoyed it immensely and that’s
how it should be.
It only remains to be said that engineer David Hinitt has produced an excellent
recording. The acoustic of the Trinity College Chapel has been used most sympathetically
and the recording combines ambience and clarity in a most pleasing way. Nicholas
Anderson’s booklet essay is first rate.
Has the Christmas story ever been better or more compellingly set to music
than by Bach? Possibly, though offhand I can’t think of a work that
improves upon Bach’s inspirational setting. This stylish and committed
performance is one that renews again one’s awe at the genius of Bach.
I know Stephen Layton’s new recording will give me great pleasure this
Christmas and in the future and I hope it will do the same for you.
John Quinn
A stylish and committed performance that renews again one’s awe at the
genius of Bach.