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1 LP -
BG-550 - (p) 1954
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1 CD -
08 5069 71 - (c) 1994 |
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CANTATAS
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Johann Sebastian
BACH (1685-1750) |
Cantata
No. 170 "Vergnügte Ruh, beliebte
Seelenlust", BWV 170 |
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23' 08" |
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- 1.
Aria "Vergnügte
Ruh,beliebte Seelenlust" |
6' 48" |
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A1
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2. Recitative "Die Welt, das
Sündenhaus" | 3. Aria "Wie jammern
mich"
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9' 26" |
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A2
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4. Recitative "Wer sollte ich" | 5.
Aria "Wie leid mir das Leben"
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6' 54" |
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A3 |
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Mass
in B minor, BWV 232
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Agnus Dei
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5' 29" |
B1 |
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Cantata
No. 54 "Widerstehe doch der Sünde",
BWV 54 |
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- 1.
Aria "Widerstehe doch
der Sünde" | 2. Recitative "Die Art
verruchter Sünden" | 3. Aria "Wer Sünde
tut"
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13' 26" |
B2 |
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Alfred
Deller, counter-tenor
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LEONHARDT
BAROQUE ENSEMBLE | Gustav
Leonhardt, organ and director
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- Michel Piguet, oboe |
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- Eduard Melkus,
Marie Leonhardt, baroque violins |
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- Kurt Theiner,
Alice Hoffelner, baroque violas |
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- Nicolaus
Harnoncourt, baroque 'cello |
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- Alfred
Planiawsky, baroque double-bass |
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Luogo
e data di registrazione |
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Franziskanerkirche,
Vienna (Austria) - maggio 1954 |
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Registrazione: live
/ studio |
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studio |
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Producer |
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Seymour Solomon
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Engineer
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Prima Edizione LP |
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Vanguard - The Bach
Guild | BG-550 | 1 LP - durata 42'
03" | (p) 1954
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Edizione CD |
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Vanguard Classics |
08 5069 71 | 1 CD - durata 59' 20"
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Cover Art
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Note |
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Nell'edizione in CD
sono presenti musiche di Haendel
non facenti parte dell'edizione
originale.
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The two Bach
solo cantatas on this record
are given by Spitta to the
period 1727-1734 in Leipzig,
described by him as "the
richest and most fruitful
years of Bach's life." The
small forces which Bach
employs in these works do
not make for any lessening
of musical stature. They
have a chamber quality, and
like the chamber works of
the great composers of a
century later, they reveal
the more deeply
instrospective thinking of
the composer.
The cantatas illustrate
vividly two different sides
of Bach's religious art; the
close attention to details
of the text, illustrating it
with musical phrases and
effects that have an almost
pictorial quality, which
Albert Schweitzer has
annotated so exhaustively;
and the profound
intellectual qualities,
displayed in musical
architecture, that Spitta so
exalts in the master.
In the Cantata No. 170.
"Vergnügte Ruh" the very
opening, with its timbres of
oboe and strings, and
tenderly rocking rhythm,
evoke a feeling of peace and
contentment of spirit, while
the entry of the voice adds
a note of yearning, and the
aria is a beautiful working
out of this conflict. Of the
following explosive
recitative, while we must
consider that its words were
part of the religious
tradition of the time, it is
hard not to find Bach also
speaking his mind in anger
against the pettiness and
meanness which he found
about him. With the second
aria, there is a reversal of
orchestral forces, with the
strings dropping to the
bass, and the organ, which
had formerly played the continuo,
now rising to a brilliant obbligato
part. How effectively the
organ phrases illustrate
"Wie jammern," the clamor
upon the sympathy of the
good-hearted man by the
perverse and misguided
hearts! The aria proceeds as
a clash between the solo
singer and the obbligato
organ, a remarkable
psychological portrayal of
unrest and resolution. The
following recitative, which
is accompanied, is more
peaceful. And in the closing
aria, Bach shows that having
made his own rules, he can
break them. The words at the
opening tell of how painful
life appears to him, but the
music belies this,
expressing a robust joy in
life, a victory over
depressing and tormenting
thoughts. This music, like
all great music employing
words or story, while it
embodies direct illustrative
material, uses these only as
elements in a musical
structure, the importance of
which is that it captures
the deepest states of mind
of the composer. This
cantata is a moving a
personal document as, in a
different style and period,
a great Beethoven piano
sonata.
The score employed in this
recording of the Cantata No.
54, "Widerstehe doch," is
not that of the
Bach-Gesellschaft, wich
Friedrich Smend
(Bach-Jahrbuch 1940-8) has
shown to be based on a
rather carelessly made copy,
but on a later discovered
manuscript in the
Bibliotheque Royale at
Brussels. It opens with what
Schweitzer describes as "an
alarming chord of the
seventh... the trembling of
the basses and violas, and
the sighs of the violins,
between them give the
movement a somewhat
disturbing effect. It is
meant to depict the horror
of the curse upon sin that
is threatened in the text."
The music, as it proceeds,
also portrays somewhat more
tenderly, the anguish of the
heart. Smend has thrown
additional light on this
aria, proving that it had
originally been written for
the lost St. Mark's
Passion, on the text
"Falsche Welt, dein
schmeichelnt Küssen... ."
Thus the music that Bach had
originally written on the
theme of the kiss of Judas,
now becomes a more general
exhortation to withstand
temptation and sin. The
recitative that follows
begins, in the words of
Arnold Schering, in "an
almost impersonally calm,
declamatory style," with a
touch of the "visionary"
entering as the instrumental
accompaniment makes itself
heard. In the instrumental
beginning of the final aria,
Schering finds that "the
chromatically descending
quarter notes represent
sin... the sixteenth
continually circling about a
single note represent the
devil, while the bass stamps
down in restless quarter
notes." With the entry of
the singer a fugue begins
its soaring flight, with
searing dissonances, and
with the appearance of the
word "davongemacht," "the
events develop at a
breathless pace, and there
is no end to the surprises,
including overwhelmingly
complicated canons, until
the composition is at an
end."
The Agnus Dei from
the Mass in B minor,
composed by Bach in 1733,
was remodelled from the alto
aria in the Ascension
oratori, "Ach bleibe doch,
mein liebstes Leben." As in
the case of the adapted aria
in Cantata No. 54, it fits
perfectly the text of its
new setting.
Notes
and translation by S.
W. Bennett
About
The Performance and
Recording
Typical
of the esteem in which
Alfred Deller's artistry is
held by British critics is
the Birmingham Post's
comment, "Mr. Deller, whose
wondrous voice graced both
Purcell and Danyel, is one
of the supreme British
singers of our generation."
His voice, a counter-tenor,
may be described as a male
alto, but of exceptional
purity, range and facility.
It is the voice for which
Purcell, himself a
counter-tenor, wrote some of
his finest airs, and is also
the timbre for which Bach
conceived the alto solos in
his cantatas. The qualities
which have given Mr. Deller
so exalted a stature in
musical circles in both
Great Britain and on the
continent, however, are not
those of voice alone, but
include a studied mastery of
the phrasing of Renaissance
and Baroque music, and the
genuine, if unspectacular,
virtuosity which the music
of this age calls for. Born
in 1912 at Margate, Kent,
Alfred Deller made a
reputation as a boy soprano
in works such as Handel's Messiah,
and during adolescence,
found it natural and easy to
sing in the alto register.
His performances of music of
the 16th through the 18th
centuries, have been
features of both numerous
British festivals and
continental recitals. An
exclusive Vanguard-Bach
Guild recording artist, his
first Bach Guild recording
was ELIZABETHAN AND JACOBEAN
MUSIC (BG-539) devoted
largely to John Dowland.
Typical reviews were: "This
disc is one of the best of
its type to appear as yet on
LP... the music is a sheer
delight from start to
finish. Bach Guild has
recorded the recital in
impeccable fashion," The
New Records. "Offers
music and performances that
make it an outstanding
record," B. H. Haggin, The
Nation. This was
followed by MUSIC OF
PURCELL, JENKINS AND LOCKE
(BG-547) and the present
record of two Bach Cantatas.
The Leonhardt Baroque
Ensemble is made up of
outstanding performers in
European symphony
orchestras, who have taken
up, as a labor of love, the
Baroque counterparts of
their present-day
instruments. They are led by
Gustav Leonhardt, the
distinguished Dutch
haspsichordist, Baroque
scholar, and Professor at
the Academy in Vienna.
The recording is VANGUARD
QUALITY CONTROL, employing
Ampex model 300 magnetic
tape recorders in
conjunction with the Altec
and Siemens-AKG C-12
condenser microphones,
producing masters which
embody a frequency response
covering the entire range of
human hearing and embracing
the full gamut of
orchestral, organ and vocal
sonorities. The location was
the Franziskanerkirche in
Vienna, the organ of which
dates from 1642.
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