CD collectors who are 
                about to embark on adding a set of the 
                cantatas of J.S. Bach to their shelves 
                will soon need to hire their own desert 
                island on which to ponder the variables. 
                There is the John Eliot Gardiner ‘Cantata 
                Pilgrimage’, Helmut Rilling’s set on 
                Hanssler, Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Ton 
                Koopman’s Amsterdam forces on Challenge 
                Classics, and then there’s the Masaaki 
                Suzuki recordings on BIS which seems 
                to have reviewers on a permanent hunt 
                for new superlatives. Sigiswald Kuijken 
                has already released Bach cantatas on 
                the Virgin and Harmonia Mundi labels, 
                and received much acclaim for his earlier 
                recordings of BWV 82, 49 and 58 on the 
                Accent label – one still very high up 
                on my desert island shortlist. Looking 
                at the lineup of soloists and players 
                in La petite bande, Kuijken has, in 
                the words of P.D.Q. Bach, ‘a different 
                bunch of friends now’, and it is intriguing 
                to hear some of the subtle differences 
                which have crept in over the years. 
              
 
              
I do not have the resources 
                to do much in the way of comparisons 
                of the most recent Bach Cantata sets, 
                complete or currently in production. 
                Collectors will read the reviews, and 
                hopefully have the chance to sample 
                new releases for themselves before embarking 
                on the major investment of a new complete 
                set from any one conductor, or director. 
                Sigiswald Kuijken’s approach follows 
                the Joshua Rifkin theory of single voices 
                for the choral sections, so here is 
                at least one controversial dividing 
                line on which choices can be made. His 
                project is to record a 20 CD edition 
                of Bach cantatas, one for each Sunday 
                and high feast of the liturgical year 
                – not a complete set then, more a survey 
                which can if desired even serve a practical 
                purpose. The CD recordings are closely 
                connected to concert performances and 
                made as far as possible during the time 
                of year the cantatas were composed. 
                The CD booklets are filled with learned 
                and interesting detail about the cantatas 
                in general and each work specifically, 
                spending a great deal of time on the 
                texts chosen for each piece and Bach’s 
                treatment of them. I do have one small 
                moan here. While the presentation is 
                very nice and the texts printed in full, 
                the sections of text are not given their 
                CD track number, just their number within 
                that particular cantata. You have to 
                flip to the back of the gatefold CD 
                case to find the relevant access point, 
                and I found I became quite quickly irritated 
                by unnecessary back-and-forth wrestling 
                with pages and the clever flip-flop 
                box design. 
              
 
              
Sigiswald Kuijken has 
                a deservedly high reputation for his 
                interpretations of this music, but while 
                his authentic performance credentials 
                are impeccable I’ve always enjoyed the 
                natural way in which he allows his singers 
                and players the full range of expression 
                in terms of vibrato – another issue 
                still being hotly debated in some quarters. 
                Accent’s recordings are equally clean 
                and beautifully balanced, with a gorgeous 
                sense of ambience. There was one moment 
                on this new recording where I did have 
                some small doubts. BWV 35 is admittedly 
                the equivalent of an organ concerto, 
                and the portativo has clearly been rolled 
                closer to the microphones in this work: 
                you can even hear the thud of the keys 
                being pressed in the runs during the 
                first aria, "Geist un Seele 
                wird verwirret" of BWV 35, 
                which is after all the ‘title track’ 
                for this disc, but I do wonder if this 
                isn’t just a tad overgenerous. 
              
 
              
The instrumental playing 
                is warm and affectionate throughout, 
                full and benevolent, while at the same 
                time giving the intimate feel of chamber 
                music. The soloists are strong as well, 
                without being overpowering. Baritone 
                Ewald Demeyere and tenor Jan Kobow have 
                clearly been well coached on projecting 
                the emotional weight of the texts, and 
                the latter does this very well in BWV 
                179. The same goes for alto Petra Noskaiová, 
                whose range is less at an advantage 
                within the texture of the ensemble, 
                but still has all of the range and clarity 
                for which you could wish. Beautifully 
                lyrical though she is, Gerlinde Sämann 
                has a lighter voice which many won’t 
                find a bad thing, but there were a few 
                moments where the boy soprano sound 
                of Harnoncourt’s earlier recordings 
                were called to my mind – it’s not a 
                weakness, just a slightly vulnerable 
                quality at the ends of some phrases 
                and in the lower register. She does 
                make a beautiful job of "Herr, 
                deine Güte reicht soweit" 
                in BWV 17 however – it’s one of those 
                voices which might not impress immediately, 
                but it certainly grew on me – singing 
                for the music’s sake, rather than for 
                the voice’s. The ‘choral’ sections where 
                the voices need to blend as much as 
                possible work very well indeed, and 
                even though the single voice to a part 
                principle is strictly maintained and 
                will contrast greatly with versions 
                which have full choral forces, I never 
                had the feeling of being short changed. 
              
 
              
Taste and a personal 
                voyage of discovery will have to be 
                your guide when looking into preferences 
                between recordings of these works, but 
                I have to say I admire Kuijken’s approach 
                to the programming of the cantatas, 
                and, having heard this volume, would 
                say that these pure recordings and intimately 
                scaled performances will be hard ones 
                to beat. At least, I now have fairly 
                clear idea of what I shall be looking 
                for the next time someone buys me some 
                record tokens. 
              
Dominy Clements