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Matthew Passion (Final Performing Version, c. 1742)
Music CD CoverPerformer: Matthew Brook Performer: Brian Bannatyne-Scott Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach Conductor: John Butt Orchestra: Dunedin Players Performer: Cecilia Osmond Performer: Susan Hamilton Performer: Malcolm Bennett Performer: Nicholas Mulroy Edition: Music CD Format: Import, SACD CD Release Date: 2008-03-11 Music Label: Linn Records Soundtracks: - Chorus: Kommt, ihr Tochter, helft mir klagen; Choral: O Lamm Gottes, unschuldig
- Evangelista, Jesus: Da Jesus diese Rede vollendet hatte
- Choral: Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du verbrochen
- Evangelista: Da versammleten sich die Hohenpriester
- Chori: Ja nicht auf das Fest
- Evangelista: Da nun Jesus war zu Bethanien
- Chorus: Wozu dienet dieser Unrat?
- Evangelista, Jesus: Da das Jesus merkete
- Recitativo: Du lieber Heiland du
- Aria: Buss und Reu
- Evangelista, Judas: Da ging hin der Zwolfen einer
- Aria: Blute nur, du liebes Herz!
- Evangelista: Aber am ersten Tage der sussen Brot
- Chorus: Wo willst du, dass wir dir bereiten
- Evangelista, Jesus: Er sprach: Gehet hin in die Stadt
- Evangelista: Und sie wurden sehr betrubt
- Chorus: Herr, bin ichs?
- Choral: Ich bins, ich sollte bussen
- Evangelista, Jesus, Judas: Er antwortete und sprach
- Recitativo: Wiewohl mein Herz in Tranen schwimmt
- Aria: Ich will dir mein Herze schenken
- Evangelista, Jesus: Und da sie den Lobgesang gesprochen hatten
- Choral: Erkenne mich, mein Huter
- Evangelista, Petrus, Jesus: Petrus aber antwortete und sprach zu ihm
- Choral: Ich will hier bei dir stehen
- Evangelista, Jesus: Da kam Jesus mit ihnen zu einem Hofe
- Recitativo: O Schmerz! Hier zittert das gequalte Herz; Choral: Was ist die Ursach aller solcher Plagen?
- Aria: Ich will bei meinem Jesu wachen; Chorus: So schlafen unsre Sunden ein
- Evangelista, Jesus: Und ging hin ein wenig
- Recitativo: Der Heiland fallt vor seinem Vater nieder
- Aria: Gerne will ich mich bequemen
- Evangelista, Jesus: Und er kam zu seinen Jungern
- Choral: Was mein Gott will, das g scheh allzeit
- Evangelista, Jesus, Judas: Und er kam und fand sie aber schlafend
- Aria: So ist mein Jesus nun gefangen; Chorus: Lasst ihn, haltet, bindet nicht!
- Chori: Sind Blitze, sind Donner in Wolken verschwunden?
- Evangelista, Jesus: Und siehe, einer aus denen, die mit Jesu waren
- Choral: O Mensch, bewein dein Sunde gross
- Aria: Ach, nun ist mein Jesus hin!; Chorus: Wo ist denn dein Freund hingegangen
- Evangelista: Die aber Jesum gegriffen hatten
- Choral: Mir hat die Welt truglich gericht
- Evangelista, Testis I/II, Pontifex: Und wiewohl viel falsche Zeugen herzutraten
- Recitativo: Mein Jesus schweigt zu falschen Lugen stille
- Aria: Geduld!
- Evangelista, Pontifex, Jesus: Und der Hohepriester antwortete
- Chori: Er ist des Todes schuldig!
- Evangelista: Da speieten sie aus in sein Angesicht
- Chori: Weissage uns, Christe
- Choral: Wer hat dich so geschlagen
- Evangelista, Ancilla I/II, Petrus: Petrus aber sass draussen im Palast
- Chorus: Wahrlich, du bist auch einer von denen
- Evangelista, Petrus: Da hub er an, sich zu verfluchen
- Aria: Erbarme dich, mein Gott
- Choral: Bin ich gleich von dir gewichen
- Evangelista, Judas: Des Morgens aber hielten alle Hohepriester
- Chori: Was gehet uns das an?
- Evangelista, Pontifex I/II: Und er warf die Silberlinge in den Tempel
- Aria: Gebt mir meinen Jesum wieder!
- Evangelista, Pilatus, Jesus: Sie hielten aber einen Rat
- Choral: Befiehl du deine Wege
- Evangelista, Pilatus, Uxor Pilati, Chori: Auf das Fest aber hatte der Landpfleger Gewohnheit
- Chori: Lass ihn kreuzigen!
- Choral: Wie wunderbarlich ist doch diese Strafe!
- Evangelista, Pilatus: Der Landpfleger sagte
- Recitativo: Er hat uns allen wohlgetan
- Aria: Aus Liebe will mein Heiland sterben
- Evangelista: Sie schrieen aber noch mehr; Chori: Lass ihn kreuzigen!
- Evangelista, Pilatus: Da aber Pilatus sahe
- Chori: Sein Blut komme uber uns
- Evangelista: Da gab er ihnen Barrabam los
- Recitativo: Erbarm es Gott!
- Aria: Konnen Tranen meiner Wangen
- 101 total tracks
Free Music Notes for Matthew Passion (Final Performing Version, c. 1742)Free Music Review: The Most Original St. Matthew Passion I've Heard Hit: 5 StarsIt wasn't too long ago that Paul McCreesh released his one-voice-per-part reading of the St. Matthew Passion, an effort that seemed to be either revered or hated by listeners. I will not shy away from saying that I do not feel McCreesh is the best interpreter of Bach. Indeed, while I feel his output in early music is exceptional, his Bach does not always apply, in my opinion. One might find it too light and anemic. The voices he chose did not always blend well. Dramatic moments seemed like mere child's play. These were some of a few annoyances one could find in his St. Matthew Passion. This is unfortunate, as it has turned many listeners off to OVPP, though we know this was type of configuration Bach used and, for the most part, desired for performance (I will not tire you with a long list of evidence of this, but instead refer you to the important, eye-opening book by Andrew Parrott called _The Essential Bach Choir_).
But these problems does not apply all one-voice-per-part (OVPP) renditions. OVPP does not inherently lack drama and depth, but its aim is clarity and precision, without sacrificing drama. And that is evident in the outstanding recordings of Cantus Colln, Andrew Parrott, Scholars Baroque, and others. And we may now add Dunedin to that distinguished list of historical Bach performers as well.
This recording by John Butt and the Dunedin Consort took me completely by surprise. I've read scholarly articles about how Bach would have wanted his St. Matthew Passion to sound, and had realized, prior to Dunedin's release, there was no recording out there, not Gardiner's, not McCreesh's, not even the heavenly Herreweghe's (one of my favorites), that use the forces that were available to Bach. I had realized that there was no recording prior to Dunedin's that comes close to duplicating what this great piece of our cultural heritage would have originally sounded like. Where is the harpsichord in the second orchestra? Were is the full continuo in the "Geduld" aria? et cetera. Call me a purist, but I am so pleased that John Butt has released this recording attempting to duplicate the forces Bach had, and the impressive research that went into making this set is not to be missed.
First thing's first- this recording grabbed my attention from the beginning, and gripped it until the end of the final chorus "Wir setzen uns." One of the benefits of using OVPP is how much the listener begins to identify and "know" the singers far more intimately. Yet in the more explosive moments, there is still very much an element of surprise and grandeur.
The soloists are each well-chosen. In McCreesh's we might see how his chosen voices do not blend well, using too much vibrato, which are both fatal errors in recording Bach OVPP when the main goal of OVPP is the clarity of voices that can still sound as a unit when needed. We know Bach used well-trained boys as sopranos in his choirs, and I was elated to hear Cecilia Osmond's rendition of the arias here. The light sound of her voice seems perfect for the role, and does not hint at any operatic tibre that never seems apropos in the work. This recording TRULY gives the St. Matthew Passion back to the church. But the TRUE standouts of the cast are Nicholas Mulroy's Evangelist and Matthew Brook's Jesus. While I have praised the scholarly aspect of this set, the artistic merit of it is almost unparalleled. Nicholas Mulroy keeps the recitatives flowing with honesty, DRAMA, and urgency. He ranks alonside Ian Bostridge as a great evangelist, in my opinion. Matthew Brook's Jesus, I believe, is the most heartfelt on record, judging from what I have heard (and I have heard many). His arias performed with vigor, and I've never heard such a heart-wrenching "Eli, Eli Lama Asabthani" as his. Mulroy's and Brook's performances are truly unforgettable.
The orchestra plays with a certain amount of suavity and clarity that one misses from McCreesh. The singers even feel free to use some tasteful ornamentation here and there. Case in point is in the da capo section Susan Hamilton's "Ich will dir mein Herze schenken."
One worries, naturally, if the sense of mightiness is lost in this and other OVPP recordings. I've mentioned that I felt McCreesh's ensemble sounded, at times, too light and anemic. There seemed to be no urgency in "Barrabam!", "Lasst ihn! Haltet!," or when the crowd shouts for Jesus to come down from the cross and save himself. But that is definitely NOT the case here with Dunedin. When all eight of the singers required to perform his gem of Western culture are correctly chosen, their ensemble numbers sound every bit as weighty as those of full-scale choirs. "Kommt ihr Toechter" has as much drive, power, and pathos and any recording. The choral interjections of "Lasst ihn! Haltet! Bindet Nicht" are explosive, and when the crowd screams for "Barrabam!" and "Lass sehen, ob Elias koome und ihm helfe!" it is dramatic. The balance between the St. Matthew Passion's inherent reverence and inherent drama is perfectly realized here.
I cannot begin to express how excited I am to have discovered this relatively new ensemble called the Dunedin Consort, and will not hesitate to add them to my list of favorites including Cantus Colln and Collegium Vocale.
Do not let McCreesh's recording deter you from the idea of the St. Matthew Passion being performed OVPP. John Butt and Dunedin have shown how great OVPP in the St. Matthew Passion can sound. But if you happened to like McCreesh's set (I also admit, there were many moments in his pioneering recording that I admire) you will love Dunein Consort's. It is truly the most original rendition, both musicologically and artistically, I have heard so far. One might hope that Cantus Colln or Andrew Parrott offer their readings of it in the near future, but Dunedin Consort's St. Matthew Passion is not to be missed by any classical listener, whether familiar with the OVPP concept or not.
Matthew Passion (Final Performing Version, c. 1742) Poster3 SACD Discs The Dunedin Consort, under the direction of John Butt, follows its award-winning recording of The Messiah with J.S. Bach's Matthew Passion. This recording cements the Consort s reputation as a group with particular expertise in Baroque music and performance practice. The Dunedin Consort has established a reputation for performing familiar works from the Baroque era in ways which shed fresh light on the original performance: this new recording presents the Matthew Passion for the first time with Bach s final revisions of scoring, as performed around 1742 (its most familiar form is the 1736 version). John Butt and the Dunedin Consort recreate the instrumentation and vocal scoring that Bach employed to deliver a unique and historically informed recording. Most striking is the use of eight principal voices (four in each of the two choirs). Matthew Passion, one of Bach s most celebrated choral masterpieces, is an emotional and challenging musical experience delivered with style and insight by the Dunedin Consort. In 2007, the Dunedin Consort s tenth anniversary year, the group reached a new level of critical acclaim, culminating in the Classic FM Gramophone Award for Messiah in the Baroque Vocal category. This is the only such award presented to a Scottish group in recent years (and the first to an ensemble that is not a Scottish National Company or BBC orchestra) and now gives the Dunedin Consort a truly international reputation. The Dunedin Consort has won praise for the natural style of their soloists (an authoritative bass and a superb contralto The Guardian) and renown for the virtuosity of the singers. The Dunedin Consort has appeared at festivals in Belgium, Canada, France, Italy, Spain, Northern Ireland and the Channel Islands as well as at the Edinburgh International Festival, has appeared on BBC 2 and BBC 4 television and been broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and BBC Scotland. Recommended track: Track 26 on Disc One Da kam Jesus mit ihnen zu einem Hofe -Nicholas Mulroy (Evangelist) and Matthew Brook (Jesus) hauntingly convey the pain and distress as Jesus realises he will be betrayed.
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