This disc presents a subtle, delicately-articulated, 
                  gentle yet penetrating account of Buxtehude's seven-part cantata 
                  cycle Membra Jesu nostri (The Limbs of our Jesus). It 
                  follows closely on Volume XV (reviewed here recently) of Ton 
                  Koopman's outstanding survey of all of Buxtehude's surviving 
                  works. The singing and playing, the sensitivity to the particularities 
                  as much as to the idiom of Buxtehude's beautiful music, the 
                  meticulous execution with both attention to detail and a holistic 
                  understanding of the composer's motives make this CD shine as 
                  much as any in the series. 
                    
                  Composed in 1680, the Membra Jesu nostri is essentially 
                  the first Lutheran oratorio. The main text comprises poetry 
                  from the mediaeval hymn, 'Salve mundi salutare', once thought 
                  to be by Bernard of Clairvaux but now more likely to have been 
                  the work of Arnulf of Louvain, who died in the middle of the 
                  C13th. Each section is addressed to a different part of Christ's 
                  crucified body… the feet, knees, hands, side, breast, 
                  heart, and face. Buxtehude then 'encloses' each strophe by repeating 
                  its opening Biblical verse. 
                    
                  Scored variously for five voices, SSATB (who also form the choir), 
                  two violins and basso continuo with a viola da gamba consort 
                  in the longest section (to the heart), Buxtehude's splendid 
                  and moving Membra Jesu nostri was dedicated to Gustaf 
                  Düben, friend and fellow musician from Stockholm (where 
                  he was organist and Kapellmeister), though of German descent. 
                  An earlier Düben (Andreas, who lived from 1555 to 1625) 
                  worked as organist at St Thomas, Leipzig. 
                    
                  Yes, North German music of the seventeenth century does have 
                  something of a hothouse feel to it but it is far from incestuous, 
                  or inward-looking. It is in fact concentrated and shot through 
                  with slowly evolving complex commitment to the confessional 
                  ideas and ideals that evolved from the Reformation and in the 
                  teeth of the Thirty Years War (1618 - 1848). Buxtehude's greatest 
                  works (of which this is one) distill and concentrate his religious 
                  and broader spiritual convictions into music of great effect 
                  and perhaps even greater affect. Here Koopman and his forces 
                  are fully behind every nuance and hint at feeling. 
                    
                  It's important to note that for all its devotional thrust and 
                  tone, Buxtehude's Membra Jesu nostri is not a conventional 
                  liturgical work as such. Rather it is a setting of mystical 
                  poetry somewhat akin - though in a much more subdued tone - 
                  to the approach which, say, the 'Song of Songs' takes to adoration 
                  and sacred love. 
                    
                  Buxtehude's tempi, restraint in instrumental textures and even 
                  unassuming architecture and musical structure must be respected. 
                  This is not a glowing, backlit spectacle. It's a meditation. 
                  And Koopman and his soloists fully understand this. Both Wohlgemuth 
                  and Martens are typically adept - though the others are exemplary. 
                  The performers are all collaborating; there is nothing operatic 
                  and any drama is subdued. They are all also aware of the advantages 
                  of a careful balance between such contemporary liturgical priorities 
                  on the one hand and, on the other, the weight of responsibility 
                  to make this exceptional work sound both approachable and … 
                  special. They achieve that balance completely here. 
                    
                  The trick seems to have been that Koopman's interpretation does 
                  not merely 'sound' exceptional. The seven cantatas are each 
                  brought to life by familiarity with their texts, their origins, 
                  with the musical technicalities and details, with the interpretative 
                  challenges, the need for contrast yet importance of wholeness; 
                  and by knowing so well the way Buxtehude thought. Lastly there 
                  is a healthy dose of veneration. They are then melded into a 
                  beautiful and fragile yet enduring whole, which is quite remarkable. 
                  
                    
                  In some ways, the more formal aspects of the construction of 
                  the texts and corresponding music would suggest a lack of exploration, 
                  of experimentation and of not straying very far from the music's 
                  obvious heart. However this is music by Buxtehude, who knew 
                  his milieu as well as, presumably, he knew contemporary and 
                  even likely future audiences. Limitations to the composer were 
                  not so much challenges as structural strengths from which great 
                  excursions could be, and were, made. Membra Jesu nostri 
                  is strangely outward-looking in its pondering on the subject: 
                  life after evident death, perhaps. 
                    
                  Again, Koopman, his soloists and accompanying players achieve 
                  just the right interpretative balance between what Buxtehude 
                  wrote and what inspired him. The result is that colour is present. 
                  This is always deployed for a good and obvious reason: the developing 
                  use of keys throughout, the variety of the texts, the contrasts 
                  between cantatas. 
                    
                  The fulcrum around which the rest of the cantatas seem to revolve 
                  is, understandably, the Ad cor. Here the singers come 
                  together in an almost unbearably intense profusion of honesty 
                  and openness - particularly the Vulnerasti cor meum [tr.25]. 
                  The final four movements of Ad faciem [tr.s 26-29] come 
                  almost - though not quite - as a 'relief', a loosening of the 
                  tension. This final movement is as much a directed meditation 
                  as any other and, at its conclusion, you simply want to sit 
                  in silence. This is perhaps before returning to the start of 
                  this rock-solid yet highly expressive 55 minute-long CD and 
                  experience the inward-looking, though honest, somehow open and 
                  never maudlin music again. 
                    
                  The booklet that comes in the slipcase with the single CD contains 
                  - as always - helpful context; it includes a look back to the 
                  recording Koopman made in the early 1980s (nla, apparently). 
                  It explains how far we have come in our understanding of this 
                  music since then. It also has the full texts in Latin and English 
                  translation. Koopman calls Membra Jesu nostri a 'masterpiece'. 
                  Indeed there are over a dozen and a half recordings thereof 
                  currently available. Few have the immediacy, delicacy yet forceful 
                  insight of this one, though. Even if you are not collecting 
                  Koopman's cycle, you should consider this version very seriously. 
                  If you have any of the other CDs and sets in the series, you 
                  will not want to miss what this recording exudes: depth, approachability, 
                  sense of commitment to the religious values which motivated 
                  Buxtehude, as well as intriguing instrumental and vocal textures 
                  and impact in their own right. 
                    
                  Mark Sealey 
                    
                  Reviews of other releases in this series
                
                   
                    | CC72241 | 
                    Vocal works v1 | 
                    review | 
                  
                   
                    | CC72244 | 
                    Vocal works v2 | 
                    review | 
                  
                   
                    | CC72245 | 
                    Harpsichord works v2 | 
                    review | 
                  
                   
                    | CC72249 | 
                    Organ works v5 | 
                    review | 
                  
                   
                    | CC72250 | 
                    Vocal works v4 | 
                    review | 
                  
                   
                    | CC72251 | 
                    Chamber works v1 | 
                    review | 
                  
                   
                    | CC72252 | 
                    Chamber works v2 | 
                    review | 
                  
                   
                    | CC72253 | 
                    Vocal works v5 | 
                    review | 
                  
                   
                    | CC72254 | 
                    Chamber works v3 | 
                    review |