The jewel of this latest volume is the celebrated cantata Ich 
                habe genung/genug (I am content, BWV 82) describing 
                the story of old man Simeon's meeting with Christ in the temple. 
                The work also appears to have been a favourite of Bach himself. 
                The three majestic arias were first written for bass (as performed 
                here) and four year later for soprano. First performed in February 
                1727 for the feast of Purification, Bach returned to the work 
                at several points, making final revisions just two years before 
                he died.
                  
This is a beautifully 
                    judged and warmly recorded performance, featuring Peter Kooij 
                    taking on the role of Simeon, joyfully anticipating death 
                    after finding consolation in Christ. It is the third recording 
                    of Kooij in this work, with his excellent performance under 
                    Philippe Herreweghe still available on Harmonia Mundi [HAR 
                    1951365]. Although both recordings have near identical running 
                    times, the new performance is imbued with a greater serenity 
                    and easy confidence that I find particularly convincing.
                  
Those not yet 
                    familiar with Falsche Welt, dir trau ich nicht (False 
                    world, I do not trust you), BWV 52, may nevertheless immediately 
                    recognise the opening Sinfonia – it is an early version 
                    of the first movement of Brandenburg Concerto no. 1. Although 
                    lacking the violino piccolo part of its later incarnation, 
                    it provides a tremendously involving start to the cantata. 
                    Nevertheless, I am not convinced that it 'fits' with the rest 
                    of the work, which is generally marked by an austere and damning 
                    text ('Here I must live among scorpions and among false serpents 
                    ...'). Perhaps this lack of perceived continuity partly explains 
                    why it is rarely recorded except in complete cantatas projects. 
                    It's well performed here, with the second aria particularly 
                    well served by Carolyn Sampson's expressive singing supported 
                    by woodwind and strings.
                  
BWV 55 is another 
                    relatively unknown work, and the only surviving cantata written 
                    by Bach for solo tenor. Given that much of the vocal work 
                    requires singing at the top end of the tenor's scale, it can 
                    stretch all but the most flexible of soloists. I am happy 
                    to report, however, that Gerd Türk has risen admirably to 
                    the challenge, and joins the likes of Peter Schreier, Ernst 
                    Haefliger and Nicolai Gedda as 'owners' of this cantata. If 
                    I had to single out key movements they would be the lilting 
                    first aria, marked by feelings of sadness and lamentation 
                    and the concluding strophe, also heard the following year 
                    in the St Matthew Passion.
                  
The final work 
                    on this disc is BWV 58, optimistically entitled Ach Gott, 
                    wie manches Herzeleid (Ah God, how much unhappiness) 
                    BWV 58. The text reflects on the flight into Egypt and 
                    the Massacre of the Innocents, re-interpreting it as a fight 
                    for survival of the soul against spiritual enemies. Written 
                    for two voices - ably performed here by Sampson and Kooij 
                    - Bach fashions a beautiful dialogue between God and the soul. 
                    The central movement, an aria for soprano, deserves special 
                    mention for Sampson's expressive singing and the plaintive 
                    solo violin work. The final movement, a duet in chorale-fantasia 
                    form, rounds off another excellent edition in this series.
                  
              
The packaging is not 
                quite up to the usual standards, with BWV 58 given the wrong title 
                on the back of the CD case – a small but sloppy mistake. The quality 
                of the performances, however, easily matches the rest of the series 
                – and the recorded sound is superb.
                
                Peter Bright