Bach (The) Keyboard Concertos, Vol 1

The old meets the new in an excellent survey of Bach’s keyboard concertos

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Johann Sebastian Bach

Genre:

DVD

Label: Hyperion

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 77

Mastering:

Stereo
DDD

Catalogue Number: CDA67307

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Concerto for Harpsichord and Strings Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Angela Hewitt, Piano
Australian Chamber Orchestra
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Richard Tognetti, Violin
(6) Brandenburg Concertos, Movement: No. 5 in D, BWV1050 (hpd, vn, fl & stgs: 1720-21) Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Alison Mitchell, Flute
Angela Hewitt, Piano
Australian Chamber Orchestra
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Richard Tognetti, Violin
Concerto for Flute, Violin, Harpsichord and Strings Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Alison Mitchell, Flute
Angela Hewitt, Piano
Australian Chamber Orchestra
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Richard Tognetti, Violin

Composer or Director: Johann Sebastian Bach

Label: Hyperion

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 76

Mastering:

Stereo
DDD

Catalogue Number: CDA67308

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Concerto for Harpsichord and Strings Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Angela Hewitt, Piano
Australian Chamber Orchestra
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Richard Tognetti, Violin
These are not entirely modern-instrument performances. Angela Hewitt includes, as she says, ‘a harpsichord in its traditional role as continuo’. Combining old and new isn’t unusual because in the early years of period performing practices, the likes of Thurston Dart, Raymond Leppard and George Malcolm married a harpsichord to modern strings and wind. What’s unusual here is the melding of two different types of keyboard, one sharply transient, the other ductile; and just how their functions dovetail with one another may be heard in the slow movement of the Brandenburg Concerto No 5. Hewitt also adds a cello to the continuo while contributing notes inégales, appogiature and other embellishments to her own line. The result is a potent artistic synergy between the musicians.

Hewitt doesn’t slavishly follow a formula, though. In the Adagio of No 1 and the Adagio e piano sempre of No 3 (where she is most intense because both remind her of Passion music), she omits the keyboard’s bass notes for the exposition of the theme but only in No 1 does she play them for its return at the end. In these instances, in the Andante of No 7 and elsewhere, she also varies the prominence of her left hand to give the ripieno string bass a strong presence too, while delineating the right hand melody most feelingly.

Interpretative decisions are intelligently applied; and Hewitt is at her best in the slow movements, all of which are played with the finest sensibility. If a more sinewy approach to a few of the outer movements might not have come amiss, her ability to gauge the critical notes of phrases so as to maintain an elastically accented rhythm offers ample compensation; and the consummate Australian Chamber Orchestra is with her every step of the way. The flute is placed backward in BWV1044 but otherwise recorded balance and sound ensure unimpeded concentration on the performances. Small changes in level between some works are easily adjusted.

Albert Schweitzer denounced the seven keyboard concertos as arrangements ‘often made with quite incredible haste and carelessness’. They are nothing of the sort. Bach took a lot of care over their reworking; and Hewitt and Co do likewise over their re-creation. A superb pair of discs.

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