Dunedin Consort & John Butt - J.S. Bach: Magnificat & Christmas Cantata (2015) [Hi-Res]
Artist: Dunedin Consort, John Butt
Title: J.S. Bach: Magnificat & Christmas Cantata
Year Of Release: 2015
Label: Linn Records
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks + booklet) [96/24] / FLAC (image + .cue, log, artwork)
Total Time: 1:26:46
Total Size: 1.76 GB / 411 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: J.S. Bach: Magnificat & Christmas Cantata
Year Of Release: 2015
Label: Linn Records
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks + booklet) [96/24] / FLAC (image + .cue, log, artwork)
Total Time: 1:26:46
Total Size: 1.76 GB / 411 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01 - Organ Prelude: Vom Himmel kam, BWV 607 01:10
02 - Motet: Hodie Christus natus est a8, Ch. C8 02:51
03 - Das Orgel-Büchlein: No. 2, Gott, durch deine Güte, BWV 600 00:59
04 - I. Christen, atzet diesen Tag 05:21
05 - II. O selger Tag! 02:57
06 - III. Gott, du hast es wohl gefuget 07:26
07 - IV. So kehret sich nun heut 00:49
08 - V. Ruft und fleht den Himmel an 03:43
09 - VI. Verdoppelt euch demnach 01:02
10 - VII. Hochster, schau in Gnaden an 06:54
11 - Das Orgel-Buchlein: No. 8, Vom Himmel hoch, BWV 606 00:42
12 - Neu Leipziger Gesangbuch: Vom Himmel hoch 02:56
13 - Organ Prelude: Der Tag, der ist so freudenreich, BWV 605 01:41
14 - Congregational Pulpit Hymn: Ein Kindelein so loebelich 02:45
15 - Fuga sopra il Magnificat, BWV 733 (Meine Seele erhebet den Herren) 03:42
16 - I. Magnificat 02:55
17 - IIa. Et exsultavit 02:24
18 - IIb. Vom Himmel hoch 01:30
19 - III. Quia respexit 02:35
20 - IV. Omnes generationes 01:21
21 - Va. Quia fecit 01:43
22 - Vb. Freut euch und jubiliert 01:20
23 - VI. Et misericordia 03:30
24 - VIIa. Fecit potentiam 01:56
25 - VIIb. Gloria in excelsis Deo! 01:05
26 - VIII. Deposuit potentes 02:01
27 - IXa. Esurientes implevit bonis 03:17
28 - IXb. Virga Jesse 02:58
29 - X. Suscepit Israel 02:04
30 - XI. Sicut locutus est 01:24
31 - XII. Gloria 02:16
32 - Responsory, Collect, Blessing, Response to Blessing 02:55
33 - Das Orgel-Buchlein: Puer natus in Bethlehem, BWV 603 01:36
34 - Neu Leipziger Gesangbuch: Puer natus in Bethlehem 2:43
Given the considerable number of recordings that have tried to place Renaissance compositions within the context for which they were written, it is odd that the same has so rarely been done for Bach. After all, most of Bach's output consists of Gebrauchsmusik, music written for daily use. This release by Scotland's historical-instrument Dunedin Consort and its leader John Butt shows the possibilities of this approach. Included is a possible reconstruction of the Christmas Day service at the St. Nicholas Church in Leipzig in 1723, the first year Bach arrived in the city in whose employ he would spend the rest of his life. He deployed his Magnificat, composed six months earlier, and you hear what would have been heard in 1723, the rarely performed original version, in E flat major (murder on natural brasses), with four hymns inserted between the usual movements, a typical Leipzig practice at Christmas. These are in a mixture of German and Latin, and indeed the entire program provides insight into how Bach, and his audiences, might have regarded the relationship between the new Protestant church music and the grand polyphonic, largely Catholic past. It's rare to hear a motet by Giovanni Gabrieli on a program with Bach, but a collection of late Renaissance music by one Erhard Bodenschatz was apparently in wide use in Lutheran churches at the time, and it's fascinating to think of how the grandeur of Gabrieli's eight-part Hodie Christus natus est might have affected Bach's own conceptions. The Christmas-themed Cantata No. 63, Christen atzet diesen Tag, BWV 63, is also of great interest when examined closely as to why Bach might have chosen the specific imagery he did. Butt gives you such an examination, and he also gets big-boned performances, with limpid, slightly rough solos, from his assembled forces. The music is splendidly recorded at Greyfriars Kirk in Edinburgh, and the end result is a Bach performance that is original in concept and satisfying in details. -- James Manheim