Outhere represents a group of independent labels who
can usually be relied on for high quality performances, often of neglected
repertoire. I have recently been granted press access to download their
entire repertoire and I am concentrating here on music for Holy Week
and Easter. Most of these are available to download and all can be purchased
on CD direct from
Outhere-music.com or from the suppliers who advertise on the MusicWeb International pages.
In
Download
News 2014/3 I reviewed Philippe Herreweghe’s Harmonia Mundi recording
of
Carlo Gesualdo’s setting of the
Responsories for Holy
Saturday (
HMA1951320) and mentioned his later, 2012, recording
of the complete set of
Responsories for the whole Sacred Triduum
–
Responsoria et alia ad Officium Hebdomadæ Sanctæ spectantia (1611) – plus the canticle
Benedictus and Psalm 50 (51),
Miserere,
on
PHI010 (2 CDs [126:35]). I had time then only to sample the
later set from Naxos Music Library but now I have been able to listen
in more detail to the review download and I am just as impressed by
the high quality of the performances as before.
The Outhere press access downloads are at a barely adequate 192kb/s,
but that’s good enough to indicate that the CDs should sound well, as
should the 320kb/s download from
7digital.com (£9.99) or classicsonline.com (mp3 £15.98, or lossless £17.98). The
booklet – not available with the 7digital.com download: subscribers
to Naxos Music Library will find it there – contains the texts and English,
French and German translations, though these are inconveniently printed
separately instead of side by side, as is usual.
The CDs are available from
outhere-music.com for 25 Euros;
amazon.co.uk have the set for £20.36 and
arkivmusic.com for $27.99, reduced as I write to $23.99.
As
it happens, another recording of Gesualdo’s
Responsories has
just appeared on Glossa, another independent label, performed, together
with the canticle
Benedictus and other Passiontide music by Gesualdo
and his near contemporaries from La Compagnia del Madrigale
GCD922803 (3 CDs [185:45]). The
Responsories were sung in three sets at
Matins on Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Holy Saturday. Whereas most
performances sing them continuously, here they are interspersed where
the readings would occur liturgically with settings of Italian words
by the likes of Luzzasco Luzzaschi and Luca Marenzio.
There’s little to choose between the performances on PHI and Glossa,
so the presence or absence of the extra hour of music on Glossa and
the availability of that recording as a lossless download may tip the
balance for you.
Download from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library but neither source
offers the booklet of texts and notes.
The
Responsories for Maundy Thursday are performed by The King’s
Singers on Signum
SIGCD048 – ignore the link which I gave to
passionato.com when recommending this alongside the Gimell recording
of the Holy Saturday
Responsories (
CDGIM015 –
here): download from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library (no booklet from
either).
Zig-Zag Territoires have a wider selection of Gesualdo’s music, not
only from the 1611
Reponsories but also from
Sacrarum Cantionum
Quinque Vocibus Liber Primus (Napoli, Costantino Vitale, 1603) and
Sacrarum Cantionum Liber Primus ... Sex Vocibus (Napoli, 1603)
interspersed with instrumental music from Ascanio Maione’s
Secondo
Libro di Diversi Capricci per Sonare (Napoli, 1609), performed by
Concerto Soave in 2012 (
ZZT319). CD1 is devoted to motets and
capricci and CD2 to madrigals and
capricci from Gesualdo’s
Sesto Libro di Madrigali (1611) and Maione’s
Secondo Libro,
as before.
You can find full details in Gary Higginson’s
review;
like him, I greatly enjoyed this recording but would have liked a little
more bite and more of the drama suggested by the cover image. Purchase
from
outhere-music.com for 25 Euros or download in mp3 or m4a from
7digital.com (£9.99); booklet obtainable from
outhere-music.com).
Further sacred music by Gesualdo can be found on a Harmonia Mundi recording
from Vocal Consort Berlin/James Wood of his Second Book –
Sacrae Cantiones
Liber Secundus (1603) – which I reviewed in
DL
News 2013/4 (
HMC902123 or
31961853). The download
from
eclassical.com (mp3, 16- and 24-bit) now comes with a booklet, the lack of which I
bemoaned – perhaps someone is reading what I write, after all.
Ricercar
have gathered together seven CDs containing over nine hours of music
from their back catalogue (1982-2003) and released them in a digi-pack
(
RIC344). Planned as the first of a themed series of such reissues,
German Baroque Music, Passion and Resurrection ranges from
Heinrich
Schütz (
Seven Last Words and
Resurrection Story, with
Johann Sebastiani’s St Matthew Passion, still available on
RIC280, 2CDs: Mark Padmore, Paul Agnew, Agnès Mellon, Monika
Mauch, Max von Edmond; Ricercar Consort/Philippe Pierlot) to
Johann
Sebastian Bach’s St John Passion (Les Agrémens and the Chamber
Chorus of Namur/Guy van Waas.)
Dietrich Buxtehude’s meditation on the wounds of Christ,
Membra
Jesu Nostri, comes from a recording first released on the K671 label
in 2007: La Chapelle Rhénane; La Maîtrise de Garçons de Colmar/Benoît
Haller (still available on
K617207). There are also works by
Pachelbel – yes he did write more than that
Canon – Böhm, Bruhns,
Telemann and others. In addition to the
John Passion, JSB is
represented by the
Actus Tragicus,
Gottes Zeit ist die allerbeste
Zeit, BWV206 and the Easter Cantata
Christ lag in Todesbanden,
BWV4 (Ricercar Consort) and the organ Preludes
Christ lag in Todesbanden,
BWV718 and 625 (two of many fine contributions from Bernard Foucroulle).
The excerpts from JSB’s
Matthew Passion, rearranged for vocal
ensemble on RIC280, have, sensibly, not been included, but many will
also feel the recording of the
John Passion superfluous, with
so many fine versions available, including the new recording on the
Academy of Ancient Music’s own label –
DL
News 2014/3. Even so the new set is such good value as to make that
effectively a bonus addition to a budget 5-disc set.
I was particularly interested in the work which opens CD2. Johann Sebastiani’s
Matthew Passion predates JS Bach’s by several decades but not
only does his name sound similar, his
recitirende Harmoni von 5 singenden
und 6 spielenden Stimmen – the title page is included in the booklet
– though less ‘operatic’, also prefigures JSB’s two Passions in ways
which I had not anticipated, including the insertion of Lutheran chorale
tunes. (Look out for that of
O Haupt voll Blut und Wunden.)
Another work which I particularly liked is
Georg Philipp Telemann’s Funeral Cantata
Du aber Daniel gehe hin (TWV4:17), which
opens CD5. The single CD on which it’s coupled with Bach’s
Actus
Tragicus, BWV106, in similar mood (
RIC224), remains available
separately as a download from
classicsonline.com and can be streamed from Naxos Music Library.
The performances do the music justice and often much more. The opening
Schütz
Historia der Auferstehung, for example, may be marginally
less impressive than my preferred version – see John Sheppard’s
review of the Paul Hillier recording, with the Christmas
Weihnachts-historie on DaCapo
8.226058 – but it’s well worth having and the later,
much sparer setting of the
Seven Last Words even more so. Similarly,
this performance of Buxtehude’s now much-recorded
Membra would
not be my first choice, but it, too, is very far from a write-off. I
see that I contrived to ascribe The Sixteen’s very fine recording of
this work to the Linn label in
March 2010 – it’s actually on their own Coro label,
COR16082.
I received the recording, like all those reviewed here, in mp3 only
and at the less-than-ideal bit-rate of 192kb/s; even so, I had no complaints.
The multi-lingual booklet is well illustrated but, unfortunately, offers
no texts. Those for Bach are easy enough to find on the web, as also
should be the Schütz, but the lack of the others is problematic.
Purchase direct from
outhere-music.com for 35 Euros or amazon.co.uk for £29.99, in the latter case, bizarrely,
not due for release until 21 April, 2014, which is too late for Holy
Week and Easter Sunday. Even worse,
arkivmusic.com won’t have it until 28 April, at $48.99. Other suppliers seem to have
it now and you may find it for as little as £26. If it’s just the music
on RIC280 that you want, that can be downloaded in mp3 for £7.99 from
classicsonline.com.
A
useful supplement to all this German Passiontide music comes in the
form of the world premiere recording of
Reinhard Keiser’s 1712
setting of the
Brockes Passion –
der für die Sünde der Welt
gemarterte und sterbende Jesus, Jesus tortured and dying for the
sin of the world – a conflation of the accounts from the four gospels
which was very popular in Germany – both Telemann and Handel set it.
Vox Luminis and Les Muffati are directed by Peter van Heyghen on a 2-CD
set, Ramée
RAM1303 [120:32] The CDs are not due from amazon.co.uk
until after Good Friday, surely the ideal time to play the music, so
your best bet is to buy direct from
outhere-music.com for 25 Euros.
Download in mp3, with booklet, from
classicsonline.com or stream from Naxos Music Library. The less expensive download from
7digital.com comes without booklet but you can read that at
outhere-music.com.
Em Marshall was disappointed with a CPO recording of Keiser’s Passiontide
music –
review:
incidentally, we managed to mangle his name there to Kaiser and even
Kasier – but the new recording of the
Brockes Passion is much
better, at least on a par with the Christophorus recording of his
St
Mark Passion which I liked in
DL
Roundup March 2012/2.
Though
they are not related to Easter, I couldn’t resist including two recordings
of Philippe Herreweghe with distinguished soloists and Collegium Vocale
Gent in
Bach Cantatas. On PHI
LPH006 he presents Nos.
25, 138, 105 and 46 –
review by John France – and, more recently, on
LPH012 we have Nos. 48,
73, 44, 109, all from his first Leipzig cycle, and Johann Schelle’s
5-part aria
Komm, Jesu, komm. The Schelle is included for no
other reason that I can deduce than that he was Bach’s predecessor as
Thomaskantor and Bach set the same words later as a motet. There is
an ample booklet of notes, texts and translations.
Purchase LPH006 from outhere-music.com –
here – and LPH012 –
here – each for 19 Euros. Both can be downloaded from classicsonline.com
or streamed from Naxos Music Library, both with booklet.
LPH006 is also available in mp3 and lossless sound from
eclassical.com (no booklet – but that is available to read at
outhere-music.com).
Herreweghe’s Bach Cantatas are always worth hearing, especially if you
don’t have one of the complete series – Gardiner (SDG), Suzuki (BIS),
Rilling (Hänssler) or Leonhardt and Harnoncourt (Teldec/Warner). That
also applies to his earlier recordings of many of the cantatas for Harmonia
Mundi, several of which, along with some of his PHI albums, can be found
in mp3 and lossless sound at eclassical.com:
HMA1951365 : Bass Cantatas (BWV82, 56 and
158) – Peter Kooy and La Chapelle Royale – from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library. Cantata No.158
is for Easter Tuesday, making this an appropriate album to consider
for Eastertide.
HMC901644 : Alto Cantatas (BWV170, 54 and
35) – Andreas Scholl and La Chapelle Royale – from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library. A personal favourite,
not least for the participation of Andreas Scholl, I’ve owned this in
an earlier incarnation on CD for several years.
HMC901270 :
Trauerode (BWV198)
and Cantata No.78 – Charles Brett, Howard Crook, Ingrid Schmithüsen
and La Chapelle Royale – from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library
HMC901605 : Advent Cantatas (BWV36,
61 and 62) – Sarah Connolly, etc. and La Chapelle Royale – from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library
HMC901513 :
Easter Oratorio (BWV249) and Cantata No.66 – Soloists, Collegium Vocale Gent – from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library. A worthy alternative
to the fine recordings by John Eliot Gardiner and the other recordings
mentioned in
DL
News 2014/3, especially as Cantata No.66 continues the theme, having
been written for Easter Monday. Both works began life on secular themes,
but you would never know it. In
March
2010 I marginally preferred this recording to that included in a
4-CD Hänssler set of cantatas for Palm Sunday, Easter, Ascension and
Pentecost. (But NB the correct BWV number of the Oratorio is 249, not
149 as per my typo of 2010.)
HMC901690 : Cantatas 120, 119 and
29 – Soloists, Collegium Vocale Gent – from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library.
HMC901791 : Cantatas Nos. 2, 20 and
176 – Soloists, Collegium Vocale Gent – from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library.
HMC901998 : Passiontide Cantatas
(BWV22, 23 (both Quinquagesima, 1723), 127 (Quinquagesima, 1725) and
159 (Quinquagesima, 1729)) – Dorothee Mields (soprano); Matthew White
(alto); Jan Kobow (tenor); Peter Kooy (bass); Collegium Vocale Gent
– from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library. Michael Cookson
made this
Recording of the Month and
Recording of
the Year –
review.
If you go for just one album from this list, this is not only appropriate
to the season – actually all were written for Quinquagesima, the Sunday
before Lent, but the Passion is the theme: there were no cantatas at
Leipzig in Advent or Lent – it’s appropriate at any time.
HMC901843 :
Weinen, klagen … Cantatas Nos. 12, 38 and 75 – Soloists, Collegium Vocale Gent – from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library. Cantata No.12
was written for the Third Sunday after Easter (1714); the other cantatas
are for Trinity XXI and Trinity I respectively.
HMC901594 : Christmas Cantatas (BWV122,
110 and 57) – Soloists, Collegium Vocale Gent – from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library.
HMC901781 : Christmas Cantatas in
Leipzig (BWV91, 121 and 133) – Soloists, Collegium Vocale Gent – from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless). Also available as 2-CD set,
HMC901781/82,
with Cantata No.63 and
Magnificat – download in mp3 from
classicsonline.com or stream from Naxos Music Library
HMC901659 : Cantatas Nos. 8, 125
and 138 – Soloists, Collegium Vocale Gent – from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library.
HMC901479 : Cantatas Nos. 43, 44
and 11 (Ascension Oratorio) – Soloists, Collegium Vocale Gent – from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library.
HMC901969 : Cantatas Nos. 27, 84,
95 and 161 – Soloists, Collegium Vocale Gent – from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library.
HMA1951328 : Cantatas Nos. 21 and
42 – Soloists, Collegium Vocale Gent – from
eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library. Cantata No.42
is for Low Sunday (the first Sunday after Easter).
HMC901326 :
Magnificat and
Cantata No.80 (Reformation) – Soloists, Collegium Vocale Gent – from
classicsonline.com (mp3) or stream from Naxos Music Library.
I’ve highlighted the cantatas which are appropriate to Passiontide
and Easter, with the intention of returning to look at some of the others
in the future. Not all of those listed remain available on CD, though
some have been gathered into inexpensive 3-disc sets.
There’s
a real rarity in the form of
Gioseffo Zamponi’s recently discovered
opera
Ulisse all’Isola di Circe (Ulysses on the Island of Circe,
Brussels 1650): Cappella Mediterranea; Clematis; Chœur de Chambre de
Namur/Leonardo García Alarcón (Ricercar
RIC342 [137:30]). The
first opera to be performed in the southern Netherlands – modern Belgium
– it was written in the Italian style for a royal marriage, so there’s
celebratory dance music at the end of Act I and start of Act II. The
two CDs are housed in a lavishly illustrated hardback book containing
text and translations. I’ve enjoyed this greatly and I shall certainly
be returning to it. If you like Cavalli’s operas, you should enjoy it
too.
The recording is bright to the extent of sounding slightly harsh, but
that may be due to the low bit-rate of the review download. If you choose
to download, go for the highest bit-rates on 7digital.com and classicsonline.com
as listed below.
Amazon.co.uk will have this on disc from 21 April, 2014 but it’s available from
outhere-music.com for 29 Euros – you’ll find a 32-minute video there. It’s available for
download in 320kb/s mp3 from
7digital.com (£9.99, mp3 or m4a, no booklet) or
classicsonline.com (£15.98, mp3, with booklet) or stream from Naxos Music Library. I really
wouldn’t stint on paying for the
de luxe booklet, either with
the CDs or from classicsonline.com.
Finally,
a recent recording from another independent label, not part of the Outhere
group, Aparté (
AP061, 2 CDs):
Jean-Baptiste Lully’s opera
Phaéton (1683) tells the story of the insolent pride of Phaëton,
the son of the Sun God, his reckless ride across the heavens in his
father’s chariot and his fall. That the performance is by Les Talens
Lyriques and Christophe Rousset is almost recommendation in itself but
you also have my word and that of Simon Thompson –
review.
Lully-lovers will have a field day and so should fans of Rameau – contemporaries
had to take sides between the two but fortunately we no longer have
to.
You’ll find purchase buttons for the CDs with Simon Thompson’s
review.
Download in mp3, 16- or 24-bit lossless from
eclassical.com or stream from Naxos Music Library. There’s no booklet from any download
source but a facsimile of the original score, complete with the
de
rigeur grovelling dedication to the King, Louis XIV, is available
from
imslp.