Bach / Choir of Trinity College Cambridge: Bach: Mass In B Minor

Bach / Choir of Trinity College Cambridge: Bach: Mass In B Minor

Bach / Choir of Trinity College Cambridge: Bach: Mass In B Minor

Format: CD

Regular price $19.98
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Title: Bach: Mass In B Minor
Artist: Bach / Choir of Trinity College Cambridge
Label: Hyperion
Product Type: COMPACT DISCS
UPC: 034571281810
Genre: Classical

Within a decade of taking up his post as Thomaskantor in Leipzig in 1723, Bach was becoming ever more frustrated with the Saxon city's civic politics. Never one to compromise, he had clashed with the authorities almost from the word go. In August 1730 complaints that he had been neglecting his duties led him to submit a 'brief but highly necessary draft of a well-appointed church music' to the Leipzig council. Inter alia, he pointed out that he did not have sufficient skilled singers and, especially, players at his disposal. Bach's protests fell largely on deaf ears. In October he wrote to an old schoolfriend, Georg Erdmann, asking about the possibility of a post in Danzig, adding that the Leipzig authorities are 'very strange and little interested in music, so that I have to live amid almost constant vexation, envy and persecution'. Bach's official role was as teacher-cum-music director, with duties that included giving Latin instruction to the boys in St Thomas's School. For Bürgermeister Jakob Born and others on the city council, the composer was behaving like a Kapellmeister with attitude, one who had tasted too much renown for his own good. - - Bach remained in his Leipzig post until the end of his life. But after devoting himself intensively to the production of music for the Lutheran liturgy, his creative focus shifted: to the city's Collegium Musicum-an ensemble of students and professionals which held weekly concerts in Gottfried Zimmermann's fashionable coffee house-and to the world beyond Leipzig. Above all, Bach avidly cultivated his ties with the Dresden court, whose lavish musical resources he had highlighted in his memorandum to the Leipzig authorities. In July 1733 he travelled to the Saxon capital in the hope of obtaining a court title from the new Elector, Friedrich August II, that would in turn enhance his status in Leipzig. In his portfolio was a recently composed Missa (consisting of the 'Kyrie' and 'Gloria'), offered to the Elector in what seem to us toe-curlingly obsequious terms: 'In deepest Devotion I present to your Royal Highness this trifling product of the science which I have acquired in Musique, with the most humble request that you will deign to regard it not according to the imperfection of it's Composition, but with a most gracious eye, in accordance with your world-renowned Clemency, and thus take me into your most mighty Protection'. - - In the event Bach was not granted the honorary title of Court Composer to the Saxon Elector and King of Poland until 1736, after flattering August II and his family with a stream of homage cantatas. By then the 'trifling product' had probably been heard at least once in Catholic Dresden, perhaps, as the Bach scholar Christoph Wolff has proposed, during Bach's visit in the summer of 1733. Nor is a performance in Protestant Leipzig out of the question. The 'Kyrie' and 'Gloria' of the Mass Ordinary formed part of the Lutheran liturgy at high feasts and special thanksgiving services; and the Missa could well have been heard in one of the city's principal churches. Indeed, parts of the new Missa may have been performed in St Nicholas's in April 1733, when Friedrich August II attended a service to receive an oath of fealty from the Leipzigers. - - We can only speculate why in 1748-9, at the end of his life, Bach expanded the Missa into a full Mass, drawing on a six-part D major 'Sanctus' composed for Christmas Day 1724, and movements from assorted church cantatas. (Bach had already reworked a movement from Cantata 29, 'Wir danken dir, Gott', as the 'Gratias agimus tibi', and part of the opening chorus of Cantata 46, 'Schauet doch und sehet', as the 'Qui tollis'.) Certainly, the Mass in B minor, as the Missa tota became known after it's publication a century later, was never performed in full during Bach's lifetime. Lasting nearly two hours, the complete work was far too long for performance at either a Lutheran or a Catholic Mass. But it's constituent parts-Missa, Symbolum Nicenum (i.e. 'Credo'), 'Sanctus', and the final section comprising the 'Osanna', 'Benedictus', 'Agnus Dei' and 'Dona nobis pacem'-could have been performed separately. Perhaps Bach was hoping that the work would be taken up in Dresden. One scholar has recently proposed a Viennese connection to the Mass, with a St Cecilia's Day performance in St Stephen's Cathedral organized by Bach's acquaintance Count Johann Adam von Questenberg. Parts of the Mass may have been heard in Leipzig in the last year of the composer's life.

Tracks:
1.1 Mass in B minor BWV232[107'30] Part 1 No 1, Chorus: Kyrie Eleison[9'56]
1.2 Part 1 No 2, Duet: Christe Eleison[4'57] Katherine Watson (Soprano), Helen Charlston (Mezzo-Soprano)
1.3 Part 1 No 3, Chorus: Kyrie Eleison[3'24]
1.4 Part 1 No 4, Chorus: Gloria in Excelsis Deo[1'44]
1.5 Part 1 No 5, Chorus: Et in Terra Pax Hominibus[4'26]
1.6 Part 1 No 6, Aria: Laudamus Te[4'22] Katherine Watson (Soprano)
1.7 Part 1 No 7, Chorus: Gratias Agimus Tibi[3'14]
1.8 Part 1 No 8, Duet: Domine Deus[5'30] Katherine Watson (Soprano), Gwilym Bowen (Tenor)
1.9 Part 1 No 9, Chorus: Qui Tollis Peccata Mundi[3'04]
1.10 Part 1 No 10, Aria: Qui Sedes Ad Dexteram Patris[4'28] Iestyn Davies (Countertenor)
1.11 Part 1 No 11, Aria: Quoniam Tu Solus Sanctus[4'28] Neal Davies (Bass)
1.12 Part 1 No 12, Chorus: Cum Sancto Spiritu[3'42]
2.1 Part 2 No 1, Chorus: Credo in Unum Deum[1'59]
2.2 Part 2 No 2, Chorus: Patrem Omnipotentem[2'04]
2.3 Part 2 No 3, Duet: Et in Unum Dominum[4'23]
2.4 Katherine Watson (Soprano), Iestyn Davies (Countertenor)
2.5 Part 2 No 4, Chorus: Et Incarnatus Est[3'23]
2.6 Part 2 No 5, Chorus: Crucifixus Etiam Pro Nobis[3'23]
2.7 Part 2 No 6, Chorus: Et Resurrexit Tertia Die[4'04]
2.8 Part 2 No 7, Aria: Et in Spiritum Sanctum[5'18]
2.9 Part 2 No 8, Chorus: Confiteor Unum Baptisma[3'55]
2.10 Part 2 No 9, Chorus: Et Exspecto Resurrectionem[2'05]
2.11 Part 3, Chorus: Sanctus[5'12] Osanna, Benedictus, Agnus Dei and Dona Nobis Pacem
2.12 Part 4 No 1, Chorus: Osanna in Excelsis[2'42]
2.13 Part 4 No 2, Aria: Benedictus[4'16] Gwilym Bowen (Tenor)
2.14 Part 4 No 3, Chorus: Osanna in Excelsis[2'45]
2.15 Part 4 No 4, Aria: Agnus Dei[5'16] Iestyn Davies (Countertenor)
2.16 Part 4 No 5, Chorus: Dona Nobis Pacem[3'30]
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