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             Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750) 
               
              Sinfonia from Cantata BWV 29 ‘Wir danken dir, Gott’ [3:35] 
              Sinfonia Cantata BWV 150 ‘Nach dir, Herr, verlanget mich’ [2:29] 
              Sinfonia from Cantata BWV 42 ‘Am Abend aber desselbigen verwirret’ 
              [6:24]  
              Concerto from Cantata BWV 35 ‘Geist und Seele wird verwirret’ [5:16] 
              Sinfonia from Cantata BWV 156 ‘Ich steh mit einem Fuss im Grabe’ 
              [2:35] 
              Sinfonia from Cantata BWV 35 ‘Geist und Seele wird verwirret’ [3:21] 
              Sinfonia from Cantata BWV 196 ‘Der Herr denket an uns’ (Wedding 
              Cantata) [2:29] 
              Sonata from Cantata BWV 31 ‘Der Himmel lacht, die Erde jubilieret’ 
              [2:39] 
              Concerto from Cantata BWV 152 ‘Tritt auf die Glaubensbahn’ [3:15] 
              Sinfonia from Cantata BWV 169 ‘Gott soll allein mein Herze haben’ 
              [8:54]  
              Sinfonia from Cantata BWV 12 ‘Weinen, Klagen, sorgen, Zagen’ [2:23] 
              Sinfonia from Cantata BWV 52 ‘Falsche Welt, dir trau ich nicht’ 
              [4:06] 
              Concerto from Cantata BWV 142 ‘Uns ist ein Kind geboren’ [1:25] 
              [Allegro] from Cantata BWV 146 ‘Wir müssen durch viel Trübsal’ [7:55] 
              Sonata Concerto from Cantata BWV 182 ‘Himmelskönig, sei willkommen’[2:24] 
              Sinfonia Concerto from Cantata BWV 174 ‘Ich liebe den Höchsten’ 
              [6:05] 
              Sinfonia from Cantata BWV 21 ‘Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis’ [2:47] 
              Sinfonia from Cantata BWV 18 ‘Gleichwie der Regen’ [2:52] 
              Sinfonia from Cantata BWV 75 ‘Die Elenden sollen essen’ [2:30]  
                
              Accademia Bizantina/Ottavio Dantone  
              rec. 3-7 January 2011, Church of San Girolamo, Bagnacavallo, Ravenna 
               
                
              DECCA 478 2718 [73:24]   
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                I greatly admired and am still a big fan of Ottavio Dantone’s 
                  Vivaldi recordings (see review), 
                  so needed little persuading to explore his take on J.S. Bach. 
                  We’ve come across a few of these separate Sinfonia movements 
                  in a recent ECM release with Heinz Holliger and the Camerata 
                  Bern (see review), 
                  and while they pop up now and then as fillers in orchestral 
                  programmes I don’t remember seeing quite as many collected onto 
                  one CD. As Clifford Bartlett points out in the booklet notes, 
                  “Bach did not habitually preface his cantatas with an orchestral 
                  movement”, and so this programme only misses out the earlier 
                  short mini-prologues, and those from Cantatas 4 and 106, which 
                  are deemed “too integral to the cantatas as a whole to be played 
                  in isolation.”  
                   
                  This is a point which can be made for those who are familiar 
                  with Bach’s cantatas. In this programme there is sometimes a 
                  sense in which the ‘and next’ moments feel truncated – the expectation 
                  of a human voice or chorus denied. This isn’t so much of an 
                  issue for most of us who only dip into the huge field of Bach’s 
                  cantatas from time to time, and for those who are unfortunately 
                  allergic to singing this kind of selection is a godsend. One 
                  can perhaps see it as the antithesis or complementary to something 
                  voice-heavy like Masaaki Suzuki’s A Choral Year with J.S. 
                  Bach on the BIS label (see review). 
                   
                   
                  As you would expect from the Accademia Bizantina, these are 
                  period-style performances with clean lines and little or no 
                  vibrato in the strings. There is always continuo of one kind 
                  or another, the bassoon is considered standard ‘whether or not 
                  it was notated’, and there are healthy doses of organ, rather 
                  less prominent harpsichord in some pieces. My only real beef 
                  with this recording is in fact the organ. This is a ‘portativo’ 
                  or small organ with limited tonal colour and a rather penetrating 
                  treble sound which dominates in the works where it has a solo 
                  role. The opening joyous Sinfonia BWV 29 ‘Wir danken dir, 
                  Gott’ is a representative example, and is almost more off-putting 
                  than inviting. This may not bother most people and I don’t want 
                  to labour the point, but every time it leaps out at us my heart 
                  sinks just a little.  
                   
                  Highlights for me include the trumpet and drum succulence of 
                  the Sonata BWV 31 ‘Der Himmel lacht’ followed immediately 
                  by the whispering busy-ness of the Concerto BWV 152 ‘Tritt 
                  auf die Glaubensbahn’. Comparing the Sinfonia BWV 21 
                  ‘Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis’ with the Holliger CD I mentioned 
                  earlier I don’t feel as much of an emotional charge from the 
                  Accademia Bizantina, though they still create a nicely grieving 
                  mood, the organ noodling away in the lower registers but with 
                  an appropriately more mellow stop. This is mirrored earlier 
                  on by BWV 12, and compliments go to the oboist in both 
                  cases. You can also be prepared to hear things you will have 
                  heard elsewhere. For instance the Sinfonia BWV 52 ‘Falsche 
                  Welt, dir trau ich nicht’ is lifted almost straight from 
                  Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No.1, giving the horns a 
                  chance to shine. This is followed by the short Concerto BWV 
                  142 ‘Uns ist ein Kind geboren’ which has duets from recorders 
                  and oboes, which in turn sandwiches the orchestral Allegro 
                  BWV 146 ‘Wir müssen durch viel Trübsal’ which comes from 
                  the Harpsichord Concerto BWV 1052 in D minor – the solo 
                  in the hands of ‘it’s that organ again’.  
                   
                  This CD is a joyous project and a very nice thing to have around. 
                  It looks as if the band had fun with the photo shoot, though 
                  note the lack of reflection of the players inside the case – 
                  that precariously close water’s edge is a photoshop illusion. 
                  I was hoping the effect of having all of these pieces together 
                  in one place would be something akin to discovering a ‘new’ 
                  Bach work – something which felt like an extra-extended suite 
                  or even something vaguely symphonic, but this isn’t quite the 
                  case. Care has however been taken to structure the programme 
                  so that these is a reasonable amount of contrast, and with gorgeous 
                  playing, bags of excellent music and a very fine recording this 
                  is an easily recommendable release.  
                   
                  Dominy Clements 
                   
                 
                            
                 
                
           
                 
                 
                 
             
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