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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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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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J.S. Bach: Himmelfahrts-Oratorium

Philippe Herreweghe

Classical - Released October 1, 1993 | harmonia mundi

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J.S. Bach: O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, BWV 60

Netherlands Bach Collegium

Classical - Released November 21, 2021 | Brilliant Classics

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Anti-Melancholicus

Alia Mens

Classical - Released March 10, 2023 | Paraty

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Bach : Cantatas Vol. 21

Ton Koopman

Classical - Released January 1, 2006 | Challenge Classics

With this set of 12 cantatas, a few of them quite short, Dutch historical-instrument conductor Ton Koopman approaches the end of his monumental traversal of the complete Bach cantata corpus. The cantatas here mostly date from the last two decades of Bach's life. By this time Bach had cantatas from earlier cycles ready for most occasions pertaining to the liturgical year. Several of the works here were written for special occasions -- weddings in at least two cases. The orchestration for the most part is large and varied, with several pieces including trumpets and tympani; the Cantata No. 195, "Dem Gerechten muß das Licht," BWV 195, features a dazzling array of strings, oboe, oboe d'amore, transverse flutes, horns, trumpets, bassoon, timpani, and continuo. The result is that these pieces play to the strengths of Koopman's interpretations: the warm, flawless blend of the Amsterdam Baroque Choir and the sharp differentiation of the instruments within what remains a big, festive sound overall. The famous cantata in this group is the Cantata No. 140, "Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme," BWV 140, with its "Sleepers Awake" chorale and its lovely variations on a pastoral theme. Sample the opening chorus (CD 2, track 1) for an idea of what you can expect in the various large choruses in the lesser-known cantatas in the set: each has its nice textural touches, and not a one gets lost in Koopman's expert interpretation. Hear the "Welt, ade, ich bin dein müde" (World, goodbye, I am tired of you) movement of the Cantata No. 158, "Der Friede sei mit dir," BWV 158, for an example of Koopman at his best: this odd combination of a bass aria with mantra-like interjections of the chorale from the choir's sopranos would throw a lesser conductor. The soloists in this set are also unusually effective. Soprano Sandrine Piau's voice is unhampered by the high pitch Koopman employs, and her soaring lyricism makes an effective foil for the unusual, rather English horn-like timbre of the alto of Bogna Bartosz. There is something a bit cool in Koopman's readings; for deep humanistic insights into Bach's music, the evolving cantata set by John Eliot Gardiner may be preferable. But in the public, festive music heard here, this lion of the historical-performance movement is hard to beat. © TiVo
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Bach: Redemption

Anna Prohaska

Classical - Released June 26, 2020 | Alpha Classics

Hi-Res Booklet
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: Weihnachts-Oratorium, BWV 248

Bachchor Mainz

Classical - Released October 12, 2018 | Naxos

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Bach : Passio secundum Johannem (St. John Passion)

Philippe Pierlot

Sacred Vocal Music - Released March 31, 2011 | Mirare

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Bach : Weihnachts-Oratorium

Ruth Ziesak

Classical - Released December 27, 2000 | CapriccioNR

Distinctions Diapason d'or

Bach: Weihnachtsoratorium (Christmas Oratorio)

René Jacobs

Sacred Oratorios - Released October 20, 1997 | harmonia mundi

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J.S. Bach: Christmas Oratorio

René Jacobs

Classical - Released October 20, 1997 | harmonia mundi

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Bach Arias

Ensemble Pulcinella

Classical - Released November 26, 2012 | Aparté

Hi-Res Booklet

Bach: Cantatas, Vol. 28

Lenneke Ruiten

Classical - Released April 1, 2013 | SDG

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This is the 28th and final album in British conductor John Eliot Gardiner's cycle of Bach's cantatas with his Monteverdi Choir, and it comes with a two-page list of financial backers akin to the subscribers who might have financed secular music in an earlier day. The music was recorded, live with later tweaking, at St. Giles Cripplegate church, London, after the choir had completed its tour of continental churches, performing appropriate cantatas for the day or week of the concert (this one was not performed during Ascension Week, but it's hard to detect any loss of the immediacy of music-making that has been the series' trademark). The series doesn't exactly end with a bang, for the so-called Himmelfahrtsoratorium, Lobet Gott in seinen Reichen, BWV 11, is added to three cantatas; this recitative-heavy little oratorio, included because of its liturgical link to the cantatas (all the music was intended for the Feast of the Ascension), is rarely performed. But Gardiner and company show no evidence of flagging energy; the choruses of the cantatas depicting Christ's ascent into heaven are exuberant; Gardiner's warm humanistic tone is in evidence throughout; and the booklet comes with a fine installment of Gardiner's strikingly detailed engagement with the texts of the cantatas and Bach's response to them. A nice feature of this installment is that the soloists in a sense come full circle; bass Dietrich Henschel was featured in some of the earliest concerts in the project, while the other three soloists are new. It is safe to say that they will be feeling the influence of Gardiner's achievement throughout their careers. © TiVo

J.S. Bach Oratorio de Noël

Philippe Herreweghe

Classical - Released March 16, 2018 | Warner Music Group - X5 Music Group

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J.S. Bach: "Christus, der ist mein Leben"

Philippe Herreweghe

Classical - Released March 1, 2008 | harmonia mundi

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Famous Cantatas Vol. 1

Johann Sebastian Bach

Classical - Released October 8, 2021 | Challenge Classics

The first volume in a series devoted to Bach's famous Cantatas with Ton Koopman and the Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir. The project is chronologically structured, so this first volume includes Cantatas composed at Mulhausen in the years 1707 and 1708. It contains four great and well-known masterpieces which convey the mastery and maturity of the young Bach, aged 22 at that time. Bach's sacred music written before he went to Leipzig, including all the works from the Weimar period, are often lumped together as "early" cantatas. This is misleading and ultimately inaccurate, since Bach was already 38 years old when he moved from his post as Kapellmeister at Kothen in 1723 to take up his duties as Kantor at the Thomaskirche in Leipzig. In fact most of Bach's church cantatas date from the Leipzig years, as does the consolidation of the stylistic, structural and technical features of his vocal works, but even the repertoire composed before 1714 can hardly be termed "early". The works composed at Mühlhausen, demonstrating a striking sureness of touch in their conception, placed the 22-year-old among the finest contemporary cantata composers. Bach's earliest church cantatas are still clearly marked by 17th-century traditions. As well as the influences of older members of the Bach family, those of Buxtehude and Pachelbel the Elder, and Italian and French masters are evident, technically, structurally and stylistically. A particularly characteristic feature of the pre-Leipzig cantatas is Bach's exceptional delight in experimental and complex handling of an extremely wide range of instruments, with refined sound effects (such as the use of the bassoon) and poly- and homophonic settings and forms. © Challenge Records
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J.S. Bach: Cantatas, BWVV 33, 17 & 99

Thomanerchor Leipzig

Classical - Released January 11, 2019 | Accentus Music

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J. S. Bach: Weimar Cantatas

Ensemble Alia Mens

Classical - Released May 26, 2017 | Paraty Productions

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Bachkantate, BWV 65 - Sie werden aus Saba alle kommen (Live)

Rudolf Lutz

Vocal Music (Secular and Sacred) - Released October 29, 2021 | J. S. Bach-Stiftung

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