Johann Sebastian Bach: Bleib bei uns, denn es will Abend werden, BWV 6
Bleib bei uns, denn es will Abend werden (Chorus)
Aria: Hochgelobter Gottessohn (Alto)
Chorale: Ach bleib bei uns, Herr Jesu Christ (Chorus)
Recitative: Es hat die Dunkelheit (Bass)
Aria: Jesu, lass uns auf dich sehen (Tenor)
Chorale: Beweis dein Macht, Herr Jesu Christ (Chorus)
Johann Sebastian Bach: Ein Herz, das seinen Jesum lebend weiss, BWV 134
Recitative: Ein Herz, das seinen Jesum lebend weiss (Tenor, Alto)
Aria: Auf, glaubige, singet die lieblich Lieder (Tenor)
Recitative: Wohl dir, Gott hat an dich gedacht (Tenor, Alto)
Aria: Wir danken und preisen dein brunstiges Lieben (Alto, Tenor)
Recitative: Doch wurke selbst den Dank in unserm Munde (Tenor, Alto)
Erschallet, ihr Himmel, erfreue dich, Erch (Chorus)
Johann Sebastian Bach: Ich lebe, mein Herze, zu deinem Ergotzen, BWV 145
Aria: Ich lebe, mein Herze, zu deinem Ergotzen (Tenor, Soprano)
Recitative: Nun fordre, Moses, wie du willt (Tenor)
Aria: Merke, mein Herze, bestandig nur dies (Bass)
Recitative: Mein Jesu lebt (Soprano)
ChoraleL Drum wir auch billig frohlich sein (Chorus)
May 2007
*****
“John Eliot Gardiner's strongest qualities are evident in these performances of six Easter cantatas made in his on-going Bach Cantata Pilgrimage series. I particularly admire the fervour with which Gardiner imbues the music, his lively responses to the many instances of word-painting and his intuitive feeling for dance rhythms.”
Andrew McGregor
5th April 2007
“across the performances as a whole, alto Daniel Taylor and tenor James Gilchrist make outstanding contributions, especially Gilchrist in the Easter Tuesday Cantata Ein Herz, das seinen Jesum lebend weiss BWV134.”
2010
“Easter 2000 had strong historical resonances for Sir John Eliot Gardiner's cantata pilgrims, as these outstanding works were performed in St George's, Eisenach, where Bach was baptised, and only a stone's throw from Wartburg Castle where Luther completed his New Testament translations. One can only guess what inspired an unusually visceral reading of Christ lag in Todesbanden (arguably Bach's first great creation), with a plethora of extremes from the Monteverdi Choir. One might quibble with moments where orchestral gestures are a little exaggerated but this is a performance where the sinuous lines and the momentum of liturgical ritual allow Luther's great hymn to take us tantalisingly to the brink of Christ's victory. The Easter cantatas receive some ebullient readings. Erfreut euch boasts one of Bach's longest choral movements and the composer (and Gardiner) demands vigilance from his virtuoso ensemble, whose roulades of quicksilver scales shed all the fear of the preceding weeks. Despite a few uncertainties in the chromatic solos of the middle section, this is a powerful account whose spiritual core is found in the central recitativeduet between the allegorical characters Hope and Fear. The presence of James Gilchrist in any Bach recording raises the stakes and his singing in the little-known pearl Ein Herz is an infectious display of the new believer's ecstatic joy, expressed disarmingly in his first aria and reinforced in the duet with alto 'Wir danken and preisen'. This volume continues to present the riches of the Pilgrimage with admirable consistency; rough edges aside, there is a unique sense of exploration and devotion to the music which comes from the palpable adrenalin of live performance in an oeuvre which has, historically, been studio-bound. Bleib' bei uns, with its strong St John Passion undertones, is an embodiment of the best in the millennial journey and receives one of the most concentrated and telling performances on disc.”
“Once again, Gardiner’s Monteverdi Choir is the jewel in the crown of each cantata performance. Add to that Gardiner’s dramatic, electric response to music he clearly loves and you have a set that rivals his Gramophone Record of the Year Award-winning disc that launched this amazing series.”
Click on any of the works listed above for alternative recordings.