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This
album is part of a complete set of orchestral works of Johann Sebastian
Bach in the year of his sesquibicentennial, freshly recorded and
released by Naxos. The other albums in this eight-disc set include
the complete concertos for oboe, violins and harpsichord, orchestral
suites and of course, the remaining Brandenburgs Four and Five.
This
is a brilliant disc, in more ways than one. The most striking quality
immediately apparent upon listening is the first-class distinction
of the sound. The music was recorded at the Deutschland Radio studios
in Cologne, and each of the instrumental parts comes through with
speckless quality, in very clearly distinguishable layers of varying
timbres - rather than huge plasticine of sound sometimes encountered
in ensemble playing.
The
first two movements of Brandenburg No.1 are fairly nondescript;
they are taken briskly with nicely lifted rhythms, but otherwise
unremarkable. The third movement, however, is very lively, with
sparkling harpsichord and frisky ripieno-concertino interplay.
The same goes for the last movement, where the second Trio section
finds the woodwind soli full of merriment.
Brandenburg
No.2 is exuberant, with the thrust-and-parry of the four solo
instruments (trumpet, recorder, oboe, violin) coming very much to
the fore. With all the solo parts equally shared and balanced, there
is no undue emphasis on any instrument, excepting perhaps the forwardly-placed
harpsichord, which is unusual.
The
tempo is admittedly fast, bordering on the hectic, yet in Müller-Brühl's
hands it is stylishly attractive. Eschewing the heavy Germanic tradition,
which sometimes makes Bach sound like a lumbering Jumbo, this reading
nigh resembles a squadron of precision aerobatic jets zooming to
and fro in perfect formation.
There
is a slight rubato at the end of the first movement, which comes
as an interesting twist to an otherwise familiar thread. The Andante
is also faster than normal, the sinuous music unwinding with much
presentiment. The last movement brings the inspired performance
to a delightful conclusion.
Brandenburg
No.3, like number two, is also taken at speed - albeit sounding
very much rushed, much in the current vogue of period performance.
On modern instruments here, there is the impalpable homogeneity
of their tempered timbres blending into each others: I found myself
yearning for the abrasive tang and bite associated with authentic
instruments.
Nonetheless,
here is an instance where the sum of the parts are greater than
the whole. Robert Hill, who has joined this recording project on
the harpsichord concertos and is also featured prominently on another
German label's Bachakademie, makes a guest appearance in
Number Three. The good professor is very much in top form on his
favoured instrument - a critical component in any baroque chamber
performance - and indulges us with a ear-teasing cadenza, usually
omitted in most other recordings, between the two fast movements.
An
altogether different sound quality, a huskier timbre, is presented
by Brandenburg No.6, because it contains no violin parts,
but rather restricts itself to the mid-range instruments - here
characterized by a pair of violas da gamba, a pair of violas, cello
and basso continuo. The rhythm is provided by an absolutely relentless
and pulsating drive on the ground bass from the pair of low instruments.
The
musical argument throughout is con spirito and there is something
to be said for the vissicitudes of period performance, even when
applied to modern instruments. The last movement has a delightful
little dance-like character.
I'll
tell you what: the Second or Sixth Brandenburg alone would be worth
the price of admission to this disc; the Robert Hill cadenza in
the Third is also not to be missed while you're at it. If there
is one issue, and this is really clutching at straws to find criticism,
it is that the orchestral write-up in the sleeve notes could
have been divided down into more paragraphs than kept as one big
solid chunk - but even this is an editorial-production issue and
not performance-related.
A final
caveat: it is conceivable that greater exposure to these hectic
speeds - after a longer period of listening, that is - could make
the music wearisome. In the same vein, it could be argued also that
repeated listening would accustom one to these tempi. Different
strokes, then, for different folks.
Certainly,
nothing should be taken away from the smashing brilliance of this
performance, and all for under ten dollars (or the equivalent where
you live.) Even if you already have these items - and who doesn't
? - this is worth expanding your collection for. Run, don't walk,
to your classical vendor.
BENJAMIN
CHEE reckons that a writer's best friend is the paragraph.
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11.11.2000 © Benjamin Chee
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