BBC Music Magazine

Third time’s a charm for this great Bach Passion

Paul Riley is in no doubt that Philippe Herreweghe’s latest take on the St John is definitely the best yet

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JS Bach

St John Passion, BWV 245

Dorothee Mields (soprano), Damien Guillon (counterten­or), Maximilian Schmitt, Robin Tritschler (tenor), Kre imir Stra anac (bass-baritone), Peter Kooij (bass); Collegium Vocale Gent/philippe Herreweghe Phi LPH 031 107:08 mins (2 discs)

It seems to be the season for revisiting Bach Passions. Hot on the heels of Masaaki Suzuki’s second recording of St Matthew comes Philippe Herreweghe’s third of St John. While Suzuki’s is essentiall­y a ‘replay’, Herreweghe’s is more of a rethink: after 2001’s flirtation with the 1725 ‘second thoughts’, it reverts to the 1724 original he recorded back in 1987, this time with slimmed-down though not ultra-minimalist forces. The result is not only the ‘best of three’, but a recording that leaves most competitor­s flounderin­g.

Herreweghe’s unswerving focus is evident from the opening chorus, whose elemental summons is exactingly calibrated, dark-grained and resolute. The urgency of the declamatio­ns of ‘Herr’ – dramatic, yet never spuriously attention-seeking – signal Herreweghe’s whole approach: his crowd scenes can embrace perky sarcasm to self-righteous spleen without spilling over into caricature. Perhaps there’s not quite the electricit­y John Eliot Gardiner earths, but that’s not Herreweghe’s way. His tempos strike home without exaggerati­on and he’s assembled a formidable team. Maximilian Schmitt’s Evangelist narrates with exemplary pacing and dramatic involvemen­t, while Kre imir Stra anac’s Jesus needs no halo of strings à la St Matthew Passion to consecrate his authority.

Among the plenitudin­ous arias, Dorothee Mields’s beguiling lightas-air ‘Ich folge Dir’ and sovereign ‘Zerfliesse mein Herze’, the aching stillness of Damien Guillon’s ‘Es ist vollbracht’, and Robin Tritschler’s ‘Ach, mein Sinn’, are stand-outs. But ultimately Herreweghe’s is an ensemble triumph, a symbiotic entwining of voice and instrument­s that brings about repeated moments of wonder. PERFORMANC­E ★★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

Hear extracts from this recording and the rest of this month’s choices on the BBC Music Magazine website at www.classical-music.com

This is a symbiotic entwining of voice and instrument­s

 ??  ?? Unwavering insight: Philippe Herreweghe’s focus is rock solid
Unwavering insight: Philippe Herreweghe’s focus is rock solid
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