JS BACH The complete works for keyboard, Vol 3 (Benjamin Alard)

Record and Artist Details

Genre:

Instrumental

Label: Harmonia Mundi

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 208

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: HMM90 2457-59

HMM90 2457-59. JS BACH The complete works for keyboard, Vol 3 (Benjamin Alard)

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Overture (Suite) Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
Suite Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
Prelude (Fantasia) Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
(Les) Pièces de clavessin, Movement: Præludium VIII in G Majo Johann Caspar Ferdinand Fischer, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
(Les) Pièces de clavessin, Movement: Chaconne in G Major Johann Caspar Ferdinand Fischer, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
Applicato (Minuets) Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
(6) Partitas, Movement: No. 4 in D, BWV828 Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
(6) English Suites, Movement: No. 1 in A, BWV806 Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
Aria Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
Chorale Preludes, Movement: Fuga sopra il Magnificat (Meine Seele erhebt den Herren), BWV733 Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
Choral Preludes from the Kirnberger Collection, Movement: Herr Jesu Christ, dich zu uns wend, BWV709 Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
Herr Jesu Christ, dich zu uns wend Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
Chorale Preludes, Movement: Herr Jesu Christ, dich zu uns wend, BWV726 Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
(6) Preludes and Fugue (Bach), Movement: C minor, BWV546 Franz Liszt, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
Choral Preludes from the Kirnberger Collection, Movement: Allein Gott in der Höh sei Ehr, BWV711 Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
Allein Gott in der Höh’ sei Ehr’ Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
Chorale Preludes, Movement: Allein Gott in der Höh sei Ehr, BWV715 Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
(18) Chorales, 'Leipzig Chorales', Movement: Allein Gott in der Höh sei Ehr', BWV662 Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
Fantasia Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
Chorale Preludes, Movement: Nun freut euch, lieben Christen gmein, BWV734 (spurious) Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
Passacaglia and Fugue Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
(6) English Suites, Movement: No. 4 in F, BWV809 Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord
(6) English Suites, Movement: No. 2 in A minor, BWV807 Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Benjamin Alard, Harpsichord

Benjamin Alard’s project to record Bach’s complete works for harpsichord and organ is an awesome one; there must be few who have attempted it, or indeed who could. Add to that his ingenious approach, presenting in 17 volumes Bach’s development in chronological sequence enhanced by occasional examples of works by some of the composers who influenced him, and you have the potential for something very special and revealing, a real journey to be savoured over a period of years.

With Vol 3 Alard reaches Bach’s years as court organist and chamber musician at Weimar from 1708 to 1717, during which he entered what is often considered his early maturity. Alard’s focus here is on Bach’s interest in and early encounters with the French style, the most obvious reflection of which lies in the harpsichord suites which dominate two of the three discs. They include the two suites similar to the so-called French Suites, three of the English Suites (No 1 in an early version) and the E minor Lute Suite, BWV996 (in all likelihood really a keyboard piece). The French influence in these pieces is obvious, but needless to say Bach’s character and German background are evident. The Frenchness of the organ chorales is less clear at first, until Alard drops in a chant-based piece by Nicolas de Grigny. The connections are then cemented by setting the great Passacaglia in C minor alongside the little piece by André Raison that supplied its theme. The way Alard’s programming revels in such juxtapositions, rather than just spilling out Bach’s music in the familiar genre groupings, is one of the most fascinating features of this whole project.

He uses a different instrument for each disc: the gorgeous, fruity, deep-toned French harpsichord from Château d’Assas; a copy of a German harpsichord whose mellow tone makes a nice ‘lutey’ sound for BWV996; and the Andreas Silbermann French-style organ in the Abbaye Saint-Étienne in Marmoutier, Alsace, which has the solidly differentiated and feisty colours to bring out the best not just in the great Passacaglia but in the interlacing lines of the chorales as well. I enjoyed Alard’s playing on the organ more, in fact; despite the big sounds being unleashed there is a cleanness and a quality of light here, superbly captured by the recording, that keeps everything clear, coherent and involving. His harpsichord-playing is in many ways no less distinguished, likewise prizing clarity and elegance over show, even when delivering the organy flourishes of BWV818a’s Prélude. There is a precision to his touch that avoids hardness, and a proper respect for tone-quality. But there were quite a few times when I wished for more flexibility of tempo, particularly in dance movements, and I also felt Alard could have experimented with inégale and varied his ornamentation more. But he is a classy player, and this is certainly a project with the potential to tell us much about its noble subject. Definitely worth following.

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