Handel and Haydn Society, Still Kicking
Haydn, The Creation, Handel and Haydn Society, H. Christophers (CORO, 2015) |
The quality of voices heard varied, with excellent solo contributions here and there, especially from soprano Margaret Rood, heard in pieces by minor composers like James Kent (1700-1776) and Thomas Linley (1756-1778), from the Society's 1823 music publication The Old Colony Collection of Anthems. Tenor Stefan Reed gave a gorgeous rendition of William Byrd's tear-soaked lament on the death of his beloved teacher, Thomas Tallis, ending with the poignant lines, "Tallis is dead, and Music dies." A quartet, led by Rood on soprano, gave an elegant performance of the "Agnus Dei" movement from Byrd's Mass for Four Voices, skilfully layering all those aching suspensions in the "Dona nobis pacem" section.
Anne Midgette, America’s oldest ensemble offers a taste of the new (Washington Post, February 22) Steve Smith, Handel and Haydn holds a night of festivity and history (Boston Globe, November 24, 2015) |
4 comments:
I had never heard the "Singet dem Herrn" motet done with continuo instruments. Do you know whether that is an authentic J.S.Bach alternative to the a cappella? It was an exciting performance, but it seemed a bit like a Bach motet with training wheels.
Milton Grossman
Bach indicated no instruments in the score and did not put figures under either of the bass parts. So it is "authentic" to perform it without continuo, but it was not uncommon, from the Renaissance on, to accompany vocal polyphony with instruments, either doubling the voices or later by adding a continuo instrument or two. So that would be "authentic," too. I have heard the piece done both ways and do not object either way.
Recordings are split almost down the middle, with and without continuo. (Some with a lot, some with minimal and the rest without... probably less than half, actually, judging by what I've come across.) Incidentally, I find that they are even prettier, certainly easier digestible, with continuo.
This Dip Your Ears post compares six different version with audio examples and might be of interest:
Dip Your Ears, No. 133 (Bach Motets)
http://ionarts.blogspot.com/2013/04/dip-your-ears-no-133-bach-motets.html
Thank you both for those enlightening comments.
Milton Grossman
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