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Sunday, September 24, 2017

Johann Sebastian Bach - Mass in B minor (Philippe Herreweghe)


Information

Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach

CD1:
  • (01-12) Missa in h-moll, BWV 232: MISSA
CD2:
  • (01-09) Missa in h-moll, BWV 232: SYMBOLUM NICENUM
  • (10) Missa in h-moll, BWV 232: SANCTUS
  • (11-15) Missa in h-moll, BWV 232: OSANNA

Dorothee Mields, soprano
Hana Blažíková, soprano
Damien Guillon, countertenor
Thomas Hobbs, tenor
Peter Kooij, bass

Collegium Vocale Gent
Philippe Herreweghe, conductor

Date: 2011
Label: PHI
https://www.outhere-music.com/en/albums/mass-in-b-minor-bwv-232-lph-004


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Review

GRAMOPHONE EDITOR'S CHOICE

Herreweghe’s own label hosts his third B minor Mass

This is Philippe Herreweghe’s third commercial recording of the Mass in B minor in 23 years and, unlike many conductors who serially return to cornerstone pieces, his finest to date. Collegium Vocale Gent established its Bachian credentials for glowing homogeneous restraint and soft-hued refinement in the 1988 reading (for Virgin), only to pursue a form of routine luxuriance in their Harmonia Mundi version eight years later.

If the original Virgin recording has its share of vocal and instrumental wrinkles, much of its durable delicacy and poise returns in the new account, especially in capturing the ‘daily bread’ of the ritual narrative of the Mass with luminosity of line; now, the stakes are considerably higher and there is a maturity in the vision which is immediately evident in the opening ‘Kyrie’. It’s a performance of beautifully calibrated dynamics, inner elegance and promising future mysteries.

Surveying the complete discography of the Mass reveals how few performances transport the listener into each contained world – be it a Gloria or ‘Crucifixus’ – while managing the long-term challenge of an evolving, not driven momentum. Bach may have assembled the Mass as a single entity in his final years but this is a work which the composer left without a performance ‘in toto’, and perhaps not even one ‘in mind’. A lot is left to judicous imagination.

Herreweghe is a master of when to fill the sails and when to trim them, especially in the large ensemble movements but also across the piece. The ‘Et in terra pax’ may appear a little laid-back compared to the driven intensity (in very different ways) of Andrew Parrott and Karl Richter but as the huge Gloria unfolds, the kaleidoscope of formal and textural possibility always allows for special devotional intimacies to emerge. The ‘Domine Deus’ is, apart from an intermittently flat Dorothee Mields, an exquisite example of how the interweaving worlds of instruments and voices create a ‘oneness’ of Father and Son.

Atmosphere is ultimately what places Herreweghe’s new reading in the higher echelons. The solo set pieces may not all reach the same high level of the wonderfully rich ‘Quonium’ (the bassoons sounding like grumpy old men), a radiant ‘Et in Spiritum’ from the perennial Peter Kooij and Thomas Hobbs’s touching Benedictus but most compel the listener to discern, at the very least, the multi-layered musical, liturgical and expressive depth of Bach’s supreme masterpiece. The opening ‘Credo’ is portrayed as a mathematical proof, a timeless constellation of glistening canti firmi, while the ‘Et incarnatus’ and ‘Crucifixus’ see Herreweghe in his element, juxtaposing the purple of the Roman rite with the adopted figural mysteries of his indigenous forbears. The ‘Confiteor’ is irresistible.

This account is one of the most consistent in recent years, though without quite the engaging exultance (the volley of D major choruses from the ‘Et exspecto’ are only impressively efficient), risk and poetic ambition of Frans Brüggen’s first recording (for Philips). Brüggen sprinkles magic especially in his handling of the registral connections between movements and some brilliant inspirational turns. While the balance favours the instruments for him, they can seem subdued for Herreweghe or non-existent: no list of players in the booklet is something of travesty in the circumstances of this great ensemble piece.

-- Jonathan Freeman-Attwood, Gramophone

More reviews:
BBC Music Magazine  PERFORMANCE: ***** / RECORDING: *****
MusicWeb International  RECORDING OF THE MONTH

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Johann Sebastian Bach (31 March [O.S. 21 March] 1685 – 28 July 1750) was a German composer and musician of the Baroque period. Bach enriched established German styles through his mastery of counterpoint, harmonic and motivic organisation, and his adaptation of rhythms, forms, and textures from Italy and France. He is known for instrumental compositions such as the Brandenburg Concertos and the Goldberg Variations, and vocal music such as the St Matthew Passion and the Mass in B minor. Since the 19th-century Bach Revival he has been generally regarded as one of the greatest composers of all time.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Sebastian_Bach

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Philippe Herreweghe (born 2 May 1947, Ghent) is a Belgian conductor. Herreweghe is principally known as a conductor of the music of J. S. Bach. He is founder of the Collegium Vocale Gent (1970), La Chapelle Royale (1977), Ensemble Vocal Européen (1977) and the Orchestre des Champs Élysées (1991). He has been principal conductor of the Royal Flemish Philharmonic since 1997, and has guest conducted a number of well-known orchestras. Herreweghe has an extensive discography of more than 100 recordings with different ensembles, on Harmonia Mundi, Virgin Classics, Pentatone, and his own label, PHI.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippe_Herreweghe

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6 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  2. Choose one link, copy it to your browser's address bar, wait 5 seconds, then click on 'Skip Ad' (or 'Continue') (top right).
    If you are asked to download anything, IGNORE, only download from file hosting site (mega.nz).
    If MEGA shows 'Bandwidth Limit Exceeded' message, try to create a free account.

    CD1
    http://eunsetee.com/PRHM
    or
    https://ouo.io/3BDEaU
    or
    http://uii.io/3XsXPf

    CD2
    http://eunsetee.com/PRHN
    or
    https://ouo.io/OLPGM1
    or
    http://uii.io/whc0Dq

    ReplyDelete
  3. Do you have Parrott's version of Mass in B Minor? It's just so well done. I have lost my copy, unfortunately. Thank you very much in advance!

    ReplyDelete