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Bach: Redemption

Anna Prohaska

Classical - Released June 26, 2020 | Alpha Classics

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Anna Prohaska asked Wolfgang Katschner and the Lautten Compagney at the outset of the coronavirus crisis whether they shouldn’t spontaneously organize a musical get-together in this period. This has now resulted in "Redemption". This is a sequence of music selected solely from Bach cantatas, compiled in keeping with the aforenamed conceptual association. "Redemption" has multiple meanings, for instance: can music give us consolation in times of sickness and crisis; can it open up emotional and contemplative spaces for us; is it redemptive for musicians to be the “instruments” in engendering music and therefore spirituality… ? Besides Anna Prohaska as soloist and three other singers, "Redemption" features a larger group of musicians – around twenty instrumentalists. These musicians serve a dual role: they expertly accompany the arias that Anna Prohaska sings and they also represent the concept of human interaction and a shared collective experience which has been missing during these times. © Alpha Classics
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BACH, J.S.: Cantatas, Vol. 9 (Gardiner)

Frances Bourne

Choral Music (Choirs) - Released September 22, 2009 | SDG

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Bach: Cantates pour l'Épiphanie: BWV 72, 81, 155 & 156

Montreal Baroque

Classical - Released November 1, 2013 | ATMA Classique

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Bach Motets

Solomon's Knot

Classical - Released June 16, 2023 | Prospero Classical

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Bach, J.S.: Cantatas, Vol. 1 - Bwv 7, 20, 30, 39, 75, 167

Joanne Lunn

Classical - Released January 1, 2000 | SDG

Conductor John Eliot Gardiner, said England's Independent newspaper, "has had the last laugh" -- Vol. 1 of his Bach cantata series was named Record of the Year at the 2005 Classic FM Gramophone Awards in London, after the big Deutsche Grammophon label pulled out of the project and dropped Gardiner just before it got underway in 2000. No doubt a bit of gloating is appropriate along with justified satisfaction in a tough job well done -- Gardiner and his Monteverdi Choir and English Baroque Soloists undertook a "Bach cantata pilgrimage," singing all of Bach's cantatas on their liturgically appropriate dates while making a grand tour of acoustically appropriate European churches, many of them with links to the original circumstances in which Bach worked. The recordings, Gardiner said, were "a corollary of the concerts, not their raison d'être" prior to each night's concert, engineers recorded the final rehearsal in situ. By the time these recordings were made in London, the concert series was well under way, and, in the words of bass Dietrich Henschel, the performers "had become spiritually familiar with one another." The results, issued on Gardiner's own SDG label, fully live up to the awards hype. Gardiner's interpretations, though they fall under the historical-performance classification, are personal, subjective, dramatic, and romantic. The program naturally coheres thanks to the common origins of the works in the phases of the liturgical year around which Bach organized his thinking (six cantatas are presented on two discs, three for the Feast of St. John the Baptist in mid-June and three for the first Sunday after Trinity), and every element of the sumptuous booklet presentation contributes to an appreciation of Bach's religious language, as audiences in German churches of the eighteenth century would have understood it. So Gardiner has indeed had the last laugh. But perhaps he would be the first to concede that the difficult birth of this project helped him push classical music toward its future, and even that the music is perhaps better, more urgent, than it might otherwise have been. In place of what would have been a series of implacably standardized albums on Deutsche Grammophon, we will now have releases that are individual, committed, and free. Gardiner's liner notes are taken from journals he wrote during the Bach pilgrimage, and they help bring home the immediacy and excitement of this project. The next step, as recordings like this move online, will be to turn this kind of journal into a blog. The old superstructure of the classical recording industry is collapsing into ruin, but this recording provides some of the clearest testimony yet that new and exciting small enterprises will fill the void. © TiVo
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J. S. Bach : Köthener Trauermusik, BWV 244a

Raphaël Pichon

Choral Music (Choirs) - Released October 6, 2014 | harmonia mundi

Hi-Res Booklet Distinctions 4F de Télérama - Choc de Classica
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Bach: Was mein Gott will - Cantatas BWV 5, 33, 94, 111, 113, 135, 178

Christoph Spering

Classical - Released November 17, 2023 | deutsche harmonia mundi

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Bach, J.S.: Cantatas, Vol. 5 - Bwv 45, 46, 101, 102, 136, 178

Robin Tyson

Choral Music (Choirs) - Released September 1, 2008 | SDG

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Johann Sebastian Bach : Jesu, deine Passion

Philippe Herreweghe

Sacred Vocal Music - Released February 1, 2009 | harmonia mundi

Distinctions 5 de Diapason
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Bach, J.S.: Cantatas, Vol. 25 - Bwv 44, 86, 87, 97, 150, 183

Katherine Fuge

Choral Music (Choirs) - Released May 1, 2008 | SDG

Aside from the gargantuan logistical problems of moving a chamber orchestra, chorus, soloists, and conductor, plus recording equipment with engineers and producers every week, the aesthetic challenges of John Eliot Gardiner's Bach cantata pilgrimage must have been colossal. Imagine: every week the musicians had to prepare and present three or more cantatas in performances that would bear repeated listenings at home. And yet Gardiner and his forces seem to have succeeded every time. In the two-disc volume 25 of the series, Gardiner includes three cantatas for the fifth Sunday after Easter and three for the Sunday after Ascension Day, and, as always before, they succeed in not only performing the works with smooth professionalism but also ardent enthusiasm. Take just In allen meinen Taten, BWV 97. Its nine movements are wonderfully varied in tone and setting, but also totally unified through musical means. Gardiner and his forces capture both the variety and the unity of the work. Bass Stephen Loges' melancholy aria "Es kan mir nichts" with obbligato bassoon, tenor Steven Davislim's jaunty aria "Ich trause" with virtuoso solo violin, alto Robin Tyson's haunting recitative Er wolle meiner Sünden, and soprano Katharine Fuge's joyous aria "Ihm hab ich mich ergeben" with a pair of obbligato oboes all form part of an organic whole here. Recorded in vivid sound, these performances will be mandatory listening for anyone who reveres Bach's cantatas. © TiVo

Bach : Cantates (Intégrale, volume 18)

Sigiswald Kuijken

Classical - Released February 21, 2008 | Accent

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Cantates pour une année liturgique (Intégrale, volume 3)

Jan van der Crabben

Choral Music (Choirs) - Released January 1, 2006 | Accent

Booklet

Cantates (Intégrale, volume 2)

Siri Karoline Thornhill

Classical - Released January 1, 2006 | Accent

Distinctions 5 de Diapason
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Weber: Euryanthe, Op. 81, J. 291 (Live)

ORF Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra

Opera - Released August 2, 2019 | CapriccioNR

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J. S. Bach Jésus, que ma joie demeure (Cantate "Herz und Mund und Tat und Leben")

Nikolaus Harnoncourt

Classical - Released January 26, 2018 | Warner Music Group - X5 Music Group

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J.S. Bach: The Art of Fugue

Cuarteto Casals

Quartets - Released June 9, 2023 | harmonia mundi

Hi-Res Booklet Distinctions Diapason d'or
The German poet Goethe said, and is duly quoted in the booklet here, that a string quartet is "a spirited conversation among four reasonable people." That is not what Bach's Art of Fugue is, but string quartets seem impelled to keep performing the work, and audiences buy the move; the rarefied air of the string quartet seems to fit with Bach's contrapuntal mysteries somehow. This release by the Cuarteto Casals made classical best-seller charts in the late spring of 2023. It is one of the better string quartet attempts, both hewing to and departing from the work's Baroque character. First violinist Abel Tomás Realp mostly cultivates a glassy sound with little vibrato, as if his line were being played on an organ, but the other players allow themselves to be more expressive. The general approach is deliberate, and the members speak at length in the interview-style booklet about the necessity for deep contemplation in approaching the work. It is almost as if the group is seeking to clarify its contrapuntal intricacies. The music broadens out in the four canons, which are placed at the end right before the final fugue. That is given a little conclusion rather than being left hanging, as in Bach's unfinished manuscript, and it leads into the chorale Vor deinen Thron tret' ich, BWV 668, which Bach himself might have intended. The sound from Spain's Cardona monastery fits with the goals of the performance, which is to add a new layer of mystery to this perennially troublesome work.© James Manheim /TiVo
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Herz und Mund und Tat und Leben - Bach: Cantatas BWV 6-99-147

Collegium Vocale Gent

Classical - Released September 1, 2023 | Phi

Hi-Res Booklet Distinctions 4F de Télérama
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Beethoven: 9 Symphonies

Leonard Bernstein

Symphonies - Released January 2, 1980 | Deutsche Grammophon (DG)

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Bach Generations

Albrecht Mayer

Classical - Released August 4, 2023 | Deutsche Grammophon (DG)

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Bach Generations delivers, as promised, works by several members of the Bach family, ranging from Johann Sebastian's older cousin Johann Christoph Bach through J.S. Bach himself to sons Carl Philipp Emanuel and Johann Christoph Friedrich Bach. None of the works J.S. Bach is thought to have actually written for the oboe (these exist as adaptations by J.S. Bach himself for keyboard, but the originals have been reconstructed) is included. Those might have worked better than the transcriptions the Albrecht Mayer does play; the spiky Keyboard Concerto No. 2 of Johann Christoph Friedrich Bach doesn't rest so easily on the oboe's keys. However, in the slower numbers, Mayer has a distinctively luxurious tone. Sample the adaptation of the tenor aria "Sanfte soll mein Todeskummer" from the Easter Oratorio, BWV 249. The familiar Badinerie from the Orchestral Suite No. 2 in B minor, BWV 1067, is just as good on the oboe as it is on the flute. Mayer plays an oboe, an oboe d'amore, and an English horn for variety, and he is ably backed by the Berliner Barocksolisten. Another draw, especially for physical CD buyers, is the attractive drawing of the entire Bach family tree in the booklet. For oboe buffs, much of this album is likely to set a new standard, and it has shown considerable general appeal, making classical best-seller charts in the summer of 2023.© James Manheim /TiVo
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Mir ist so nach dir

Max Raabe

Pop - Released September 29, 2023 | Deutsche Grammophon (DG)

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