Johann Sebastian BACH (1685 - 1750)
Brandenburg Concerto No.1, F-major, BWV 1046 (ca 1721) [19:08]
Brandenburg Concerto No.2, F-major, BWV 1047, (ca 1721) [11:28]
Brandenburg Concerto No.3, G-major, BWV1048 (ca 1721) [11:44]
Brandenburg Concerto No.4, G-major, BWV 1049, (ca 1721) [15:00]
Brandenburg Concerto No.5, D-major, BWV1050 (ca 1721) [20:44]
Brandenburg Concerto No.6, B-flat major, BWV 1051 (ca 1721) [15:52]
La Petite Bande/Sigiswald Kuijken
rec. Galaxy Studios, Mol, Belgium, October 2009
ACCENT ACC24224 [51:31 + 45:20]
In a way Sigiswald Kuijken’s honest liner-notes (set in the beautiful
Rotis font) are the best thing about this recording. They start out by putting
the phrases “original” and “authentic” in deserving
quotation marks. Then they continue acknowledging that neither of those things
are in any way truly possible in musical performance, and that the state of
performance and listening is always, necessarily in flux. That’s
not to say that anyone should stop trying to bring new or fresh-old ideas to
this music, and Kuijken does just that.
Kuijken had already recorded the Brandenburg Concertos twice before he set out
to record them yet again in 2009: First in 1977 on SEON/Sony with Gustav Leonhardt
and Frans Brüggen, then again in 1994 for DHM/MBG with his group, La
Petite Bande. The improvement in period instrument (PI) performance since
the 1970s and even 1990s has been significant and might merit a new recording
alone, but Kuijken implements other changes, too. For one, he uses a true, valve-
and hole-less trumpet in the Second Concerto and he has the man to do it-Jean-François
Madeuf. For the violoncello part, Kuijken uses a violoncello da spalla (aka
viola pomposa) with which he also recorded the
Cello Suites.
They are the most chamber-music like of Kuijken’s Brandenburgs
yet, with that crisp, uncompromising attack that makes his one-year cantata
cycle on the same label such a thrilling proposition. The thrill isn’t
maintained throughout as swaying, temperate speeds introduce mellower tones.
The natural horns that sound nowhere as secure as those of Richard
Egarr who, along with Jordi Savall, takes a similar lilt-inflected, warm,
unhurried approach. This as opposed to the admittedly exciting, unrelenting
citius, altius, fortius style of Alessandrini and Il Giardino Armonico.
Le Petite Bande’s performance is a pleasure and a treat, but Egarr - whose
recording since originally reviewing it in 2009 has only risen in my estimation
- remains the current top-choice for non-aggressively purling PI Brandenburgs.
Jens F. Laurson
The most chamber-music like of Kuijken’s Brandenburgs yet.
Masterwork Index: Brandenburg Concertos