Elizabeth Watts (soprano); Wiebke Lehmkuhl (alto); Lothar Odinius (tenor);
Markus Eiche (bass); RIAS Kammerchor
rec. January 2012, Jesus-Christus-Kirche, Berlin-Dahlem; *November 2011, Teldec
Studios, Berlin
This is probably the highest profile release to have
yet emerged in C.P.E. Bach’s tercentenary year, and very good it is,
too. It recreates the second half of a programme that C.P.E. Bach himself
conducted in Hamburg in 1786, which turned out to be the final concert he
would conduct. It’s great music well played, and well worth investigating.
The Magnificat is a splendid work. You can detect the spirit of Emmanuel’s
illustrious father hovering over the music, both in the splendour of its
orchestral and choral writing, the contrapuntal mastery and in the structural
devices he deploys, including instrumental obbligati and even the device
used in Johann Sebastian’s own Magnificat of repeating the introductory
music in the final movement. These links are both its blessing and its curse.
If Emmanuel were not the son of such a father then it is possible we would
know his name even less than we do, but the comparison sometimes prohibits
the music from being taken seriously on its own terms, which it manifestly
deserves to be.
The opening chorus of the Magnificat explodes out of the speakers in a most
exciting manner, full of vibrancy, energy and busyness. This is also a good
choice with which to begin the disc, as it showcases both the sprightliness
of the orchestral playing and the lithe, agile singing of the chorus to
outstanding effect. It’s also a sign of the commitment that they bring
to every aspect of this disc. Indeed, orchestra and chorus make an inspired
team in this music, with the final
Gloria and
Sicut erat in
principio bringing the whole work to a truly remarkable conclusion.
The soloists are a little more variable. Elizabeth Watts, normally so reliable,
makes slightly heavy weather of
Quia respexit, for all the beauty
of the accompanying string tone. Lothar Odinius is not, perhaps, as agile
in the coloratura as one might hope, but he has a bright, sweet tone which
he puts to good use in
Quia fecit and, even more so, in
Deposuit
potentes, which is a lovely duet with Wiebke Lehmkuhl’s alto.
She then surpasses this even further in the subsequent
Suscepit Israel.
Markus Eiche is a strong, vigorous bass who responds well to the stimulus
of the trumpets and drums in
Fecit potentiam.
The other items on the disc are by no means also-rans. Emmanuel rated the
motet
Heilig ist Gott as one of his own best works. Written for
double choir, not only are its musical lines well worked out, but it’s
brilliantly dramatic in the interplay of the two choirs and in the strong
dynamic contrasts he deploys. The Symphony also shows Emmanuel at his most
dynamically and harmonically inventive, and it is played with vigour and
excitement by the Berlin orchestra, whose strings seem to relish that slight
edge on their sound, and whose winds give pithy commentaries that leaven
the texture and bring the sound to life.
In short, this disc is a great way in to C.P.E. Bach’s music. If you’re
only going to buy one disc of his music this year, why not make it this
one?
Simon Thompson
Previous review:
John
Quinn