In an introduction by the Librarian of Congress, James H. Billington, and lengthy speech by the Consort's director, J. Reilly Lewis, we learned that the Library of Congress and the Bach Consort have agreed to a new partnership, which will bring concerts by the WBC to the LOC regularly in upcoming years. In an interesting development, Reilly Lewis has agreed to donate the entire collection of more than 400 sound recordings of concerts by the Bach Consort, going back to its formation in 1977. This is significant not only because the ensemble, particularly in recent history, has turned in consistently excellent performances of the works of J. S. Bach, but also because they are the only Baroque performance group that has performed the complete choral works of Bach in the United States over its distinguished history. This collection will be a valuable listening resource, especially if it is made available over the Internet.
The concert began, predictably enough, with one of Bach's cantatas, Meine Seel' erhebt den Herren (My soul magnifies the Lord, BWV 10). This work was composed for the feast of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary on July 2, 1724, something that I am rather surprised was ever celebrated in Lutheran Leipzig. Apparently, the Mariaphobic attitudes of many Lutherans today were not yet in place in 18th-century Saxony. It is a "chorale cantata" in the sense that it quotes a cantus firmus, a melody that appears in several of the movements, but instead of a chorale, it uses a Gregorian canticle tone, the tonus peregrinus, as it was transformed into a Lutheran chorale melody. This tone was used sometimes to chant the Magnificat canticle, as it is here, in its German version:
Luke 1:46–55, plus Doxology Magnificat anima mea Dominum Et exultavit spiritus meus in Deo salutari meo Quia respexit humilitatem ancillae suae ecce enim ex hoc beatam me dicent omnes generationes [...] Suscepit Israel puerum suum recordatus misericordiae suae [...] Gloria Patri et Filio et Spiritui Sancto Sicut erat in principio et nunc et semper et in saeculat saeculorum. Amen. | Lutheran Version: 1. Meine Seel erhebt den Herren, Und mein Geist freuet sich Gottes, meines Heilandes; Denn er hat seine elende Magd angesehen. Siehe, von nun an werden mich selig preisen alle Kindeskind. 5. Er denket der Barmherzigkeit Und hilft seinem Diener Israel auf. 7. Lob und Preis sei Gott dem Vater und dem Sohn Und dem Heilgen Geiste, Wie es war im Anfang, jetzt und immerdar Und von Ewigkeit zu Ewigkeit. Amen. |
Why did Reilly Lewis choose this cantata for the Consort's debut at the Library of Congress? Because the Music Division happens to own Bach's original manuscript copy of this cantata (ML 30.8b. B2M4 case), which was on display, under careful surveillance, in the antechamber of the Coolidge Auditorium at intermission and after the concert. Some versions of the score have a trumpet part, which was used in the first, fifth, and last movements only. Probably at a later performance of the work, Bach appears to have replaced the trumpet part with oboes, which is the version that the Bach Consort performed last night. The soaring statement of the canticle tone in the fifth movement sounds glorious with that blaring trumpet, which I missed in this performance. The WBC's rendition was solid and beautiful, with excellent clarity of text and transparency of musical texture, with some uncharacteristic intonation clashes. Of the four soloists, who were all fine, alto Barbara Hollinshead stood out as the richest voice, especially in the gorgeous fifth movement. The continuo players excelled in the crazy ritornello part of the madrigalistic fourth movement, the bass aria Gewaltige stößt Gott vom Stuhl.
The instrumentalists left at intermission, leaving only the chorus and the piano with their conductor. The rest of the program presented a selection of American choral jewels, including two pieces by Elinor Remick Warren, for which the president of her society came all the way from California. This is one of the library's goals, to draw attention to the works of American composers (as mentioned in my review of Thomas Hampson's recital at the Library of Congress last fall). This is not the normal repertoire for the Bach Consort, which is always refreshing for a performing group and for those who listen to them. All ten pieces were well performed, but some stood out more than others, including Remick Warren's Gentle Love, one of her Five Songs from 1955, with its lush harmonies and California sound.
David Conte's Canticle (From the rising of the sun) (from Three Sacred Pieces, 1984) takes the last line of its text ("I will praise your name forever") literally, as it launches into an interlude for piano, four hands (for which Reilly Lewis went from his podium to assist at the piano) in minimalist style, with shifting meters, that accompanies the concluding choral "Alleluia." Also quite beautiful were pieces by Eric Whitacre (hope, faith, life, love, from 1999, set to eight words from an e. e. cummings poem), Ionarts favorite Samuel Barber (Mary Hynes, from the 1930s), and Norman Dello Joio (I Dreamed of a City Invincible, from 1984, on a Walt Whitman poem). These were all pieces that I would very much like to hear again and regularly. Thanks to this excellent concert, I learned about them. Furthermore, I was happy to hear the Consort return to Bach, in whose music they are most comfortable, for an encore of Bach's "Alles was Odem hat. lobet dem Herrn" (All that has breath, praise the Lord), the conclusion of the motet Singet dem Herrn (BWV 225), which I gladly would have sat and listened to in its entirety.
The unofficial early music festival continues at the Library of Congress next Friday (April 22 at 8 pm), with harpsichordist David Cates in an all-Bach program. Ionarts will be there.
UPDATE:
See also Joan Reinthaler's review (Bach Consort, Leaping Easily Into the 20th Century at LOC, April 18) in the Washington Post.
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