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              CD: Crotchet 
              Download: Classicsonline
                              
          
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          Johann Sebastian 
            BACH (1685-1750)  
            Cantatas - Vol. 42  
            Alles nur nach Gottes Willen, BWV72 (1726) [15:07]  
            Liebster Jesu, mein Verlangen, BWV32 (1726) [22:46]  
            Meine Seufzer, meine Tränen, BWV13 (1726) [20:11]  
            Herr Gott, dich loben wir, BWV162 (1725) [15:51]  
              Rachel 
            Nicholls (soprano); Robin Blaze (counter-tenor); Gerd Türk (tenor); 
            Peter Kooij (bass)  
            Bach Collegium Japan/Masaaki Suzuki  
            rec. Kobe Shoin Women's University Chapel, Japan, February 2008 
             
              
            BIS SACD 1711 [75:24]     | 
         
         
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                  A consistently useful feature of Bach Collegium Japan's 
                  BIS Bach cantata series has been the erudite booklet notes by 
                  Klaus Hofmann. In the introductory paragraph to the essay accompanying 
                  this latest volume he reminds us of Bach's extraordinary 
                  industry - a new cantata each Sunday - during the years he worked 
                  as Kantor at the church of St Thomas, Leipzig. Some may have 
                  been lost from 1726, however, as the allotted cantata for certain 
                  Sundays has not survived. It may even be that Bach's rate 
                  of production slowed for some reason, but in any event here 
                  are four from January of that year, including one composed for 
                  New Year's Day.  
                   
                  I was particularly glad of the booklet notes in respect of Meine 
                  Seufzer, which takes as its starting point the wedding at 
                  Cana where Christ turned water into wine, this being the gospel 
                  passage for the particular Sunday for which this cantata was 
                  composed. It would take a canny reader, though, to work this 
                  out for himself, there being but a single, and rather oblique 
                  reference to the story in the text. Christ learned that there 
                  was no more wine from his mother, to whom he replied 'Your 
                  concern
is not mine. My hour is not yet come.' This 
                  last phrase, writes Hofmann, is what the cantata is really about, 
                  'abandonment, hopelessness, but later also about confidence 
                  that the hour will come.' Christ's hour came with the 
                  betrayal by Judas Iscariot, and given that he fully understood 
                  his purpose on earth, and therefore his fate, we can understand 
                  that he already had presentiments of abandonment and hopelessness. 
                  All this serves to illustrate the depth of philosophical debate 
                  contained in the libretti of Bach's cantatas, and also to 
                  make one wonder how accessible were the messages to the congregations 
                  at Leipzig. In the present case, a cantata which takes as its 
                  starting point the miracle of turning water into wine is transformed 
                  into a meditation of misery and despair. Significantly, though, 
                  it is only at the point in the libretto where the vaguest reference 
                  to the miracle is made that hope begins to shine through, however 
                  dimly. It is a beautiful work, with, in particular, a long tenor 
                  aria featuring two recorders and oboe da caccia. Some might 
                  find Gerd Türk rather cool here, but he is vocally splendid, 
                  and I find that a slight trace of detachment only serves to 
                  bring out with even greater pathos the meaning of the words. 
                  He sounds oddly out of sorts, though, in Herr Gott, dich 
                  loben wir, composed for New Year's Day, but lacking 
                  the customary trumpets and fanfares which generally symbolise 
                  the joy of that particular feast. The chorus, too, earlier in 
                  the work, are rather lacking in festive spirit, and in both 
                  cases it seems that a combination of a steady tempo and certain 
                  stolid heaviness in the rhythm combine to create this effect. 
                   
                   
                  The link between the cantata subject and its libretto is easy 
                  to discern in Liebster Jesu. Another well-known story 
                  is the starting point, the occasion when visiting Jerusalem 
                  that Mary and Joseph thought they had lost the child Jesus but 
                  find him in the temple debating with the elders. The voice of 
                  Christ is allotted to the bass, even though he is a child in 
                  the story, and in this Concerto in Dialogo the role of 
                  his mother - the Soul, here - is sung by a soprano. Rachel Nicholls 
                  appeared in Suzuki's recording of the B minor Mass, and 
                  now makes her cantata series debut here. I find her singing 
                  ravishing; her tuning is absolutely spot-on and she sings with 
                  striking purity and beauty of tone. Her opening aria is beautifully 
                  complemented by the playing of oboist Masamitsu San'nomiya 
                  and the closing duet of contentment with Peter Kooij is a delight. 
                  She is even more satisfying in the jewel of an aria which closes 
                  BWV72. This cantata deals with Christ healing a leper, but typically 
                  focuses on the notion of submission to Christ's will as 
                  in the leper's words '
if thou wilt, thou canst 
                  make me clean.' The soprano aria rejoices in the knowledge 
                  that God's will is that mankind be saved, and therefore 
                  mankind should have faith in the will of God. Once again she 
                  is in duet with the oboe, and the aria serves as a reminder 
                  of the glorious jewels to be found hidden away in this immense 
                  series of cantatas. Earlier in the work Robin Blaze has also 
                  been given the opportunity to shine, and though the chorus has 
                  relatively little to do in these four works their contribution 
                  is excellent too. The recording - which I listened to in ordinary 
                  two-channel stereo - and the production values in general are 
                  well up to the standards of the house.  
                   
                  Those collecting this 
                  series can, therefore, add this one in without hesitation. 
                   
                  William Hedley 
               
             
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