Track Listings
| 1. Die Zeit meines Abschieds ist vorhanden | ||
| 2. Mub nicht der Mensch auf dieser Erden in stetem Streite sein: Mub | ||
| 3. Mub nicht der Mensch auf dieser Erden in stetem Streite sein: Doch | ||
| 4. Wohl dem, der den Herren furchtet: Wohl dem, der den Herren furchtet | ||
| 5. Wohl dem, der den Herren furchtet: Dein Weib wird sein wie ein | ||
| 6. Wohl dem, der den Herren furchtet: Siehe also wird gesegnet der Mann | ||
| 7. Wohl dem, der den Herren furchtet: Der Herr wird dich segnen aus Zion | ||
| 8. Ich liege und schlafe: Ich liege und schlafe ganz mit Frieden | ||
| 9. Ich liege und schlafe: Ich hab, Gottlob, das mein vollbracht | ||
| 10. Ich liege und schlafe: Ritornello | ||
| 11. Ich liege und schlafe: In Jesu Namen schlaf ich ein | ||
| 12. Ich liege und schlafe: Ritornello | ||
| 13. Ich liege und schlafe: In Jesu Namen fahr ich hin | ||
| 14. Ich liege und schlafe: Ich liege und schlafe | ||
| 15. Paratum cor meum: Alleluja! | ||
| 16. Paratum cor meum: Confitebor tibi in populis, Domine | ||
| 17. Paratum cor meum: Exaltare super coelos, Deus | ||
| 18. Hemmt eure Tranenflut: Hemmt eure Tranenflut | ||
| 19. Hemmt eure Tranenflut: Der Stein war allzu grob | ||
| 20. Hemmt eure Tranenflut: Die Christi Grab bewacht sing weg |
Nikolaus Bruhns: Deutsche Kantaten, Music, Nicolaus Bruhns, Cantus Cölln, Cantata, Chamber Music & Recitals, Choral, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Madrigal, Miscellaneous Vocal Music, Vocal
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Nikolaus Bruhns: Deutsche Kantaten
Manufacturer: Harmonia Mundi Fr. ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005Y1JX Release Date: 2002-05-14 |
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Bruhns was a fine composer.......2005-09-18
Long-awaited - a triumph!.......2003-06-22
German cantatas from the late 17th Century are finally getting the attention they deserve. Bruhns is only one of numerous examples in music history where a master composer goes out of fashion, only to be rediscovered when the climate and media are suitable for performance. As J.S. Bach was for Mendelssohn in the early 19th Century; Buxtehude, Schelle and Bruhns are for their recent champions of the turn of the 21th Century. These three composers, who are getting a great deal of deserved attention these days, were considered the greatest craftsmen of North German Church music in their day. Now we have the luxury to hear these works for ourselves after the mystical "Romantic" image of Bach has faded, and we can judge this music with fresh ears.
Three of Bruhns's cantatas deserve special mention. Firstly, it is fair to contemplate how J.S. Bach (using whatever scarce free time he might have conjured in his early professional life) might have marvelled over the contrapuntal perfection in Bruhns's cantata "Muss nicht der Mensch auf dieser Erden in stetem Streite sein." This is a remarkable example of polyphony in that the exposition, episodes, and entries all seem to grow organically and effortlessly out of one another. This graceful manner rivals some of the best of Bach's fugues. The "textbook perfection" and evenness of Bruhns's counterpoint seems to go by almost unnoticed.
The cantata "Ich liege und schlafe" is an important forerunner for J.S. Bach's later expanded cantatas with multiple sections. It is in the form of the "Concerto-aria cantata", which was first cultivated by Italians in mid-seventeenth-century Dresden, popularized in Germany, then taken further by Bruhns [We must consider Bach's earliest cantatas as fluid continuations of these forms. A prime example is Bach's cantata "Gottes Zeit ist die Allerbeste Zeit", which is not as chromatic as his later cantatas of the same genre, thus sounding more like a 17th century composition].
The other remarkable Bruhns cantata is "Hemmt eure Tränenflut", which lies on the threshold of eighteenth-century mixed cantata forms. One should pay close attention to the final "Amen" in which the beginning is quoted almost note for note in Bach's "Christ lag in Todesbanden" BWV 4. It's important to keep in mind that this music was written in a period where composers rarely intended for the parts to be doubled. The French innovation of "orchestral doubling" that later influenced Bach, Handel, and Telemann did much to change this. However, when we put Bach in the context of the North German cantatas, it't then easier to justify why conductors like Andrew Parrott and Joshua Rifkin perform and record Bach with one-per-part.
There's not much to say about Cantus Colln's performance of the Bruhns cantatas other than the fact that this ensemble is clearly in its prime. Konrad Junghänel has been directing some of the highest level recordings of concerted vocal music in the past ten years (listen to their recordings of Schütz's "Psalmen Davids" or the cantatas of Buxtehude). Junghänel, together with his expert native German singers and his highly sensitive continuo section, just get better and better! If you want to hear baroque performance at its finest, you should not hesitate to buy this CD.
On this recording are six of the twelve surviving Bruhns cantatas. Does this imply that Jungänel will release a Vol. 2 in the near future?
An enthusiastic 5-stars!!!
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