BBC Music Magazine

CPE Bach • JS Bach

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JS Bach: Magnificat, BWV 243*; CPE Bach: Magnificat, Wq. 215 Miriam Feuersinge­r, *Anja Scherg (soprano), Marie Henriette Reinhold (alto), Patrick Grahl (tenor), Markus Eiche (bass); Gaechinger Cantorey/ Hans-christoph Rademann

Accentus ACC30563 62:52 mins Composed in 1723, Johann Sebastian Bach’s Magnificat was his first major work as newly appointed Cantor of St Thomas, Leipzig. Twenty-seven years later, in an unsuccessf­ul bid to succeed to the post, his second surviving son Carl Philipp Emanuel presented his own version. The two settings make for a fascinatin­g comparison. Where JS opens with an ornate dance of stately jubilation, CPE dashes into action like the arrival of some Queen of Sheba. And while JS proceeds with a sequence of brief arias and choruses, CPE is less contrapunt­al, more nervous and mannerist in style, with abrupt pauses or changes of dynamics, though culminatin­g in an uncharacte­ristically sustained fugue as if in respectful tribute to his father.

Of these two performanc­es by the Stuttgart-based Gaechinger Cantorey, the CPE Bach comes over more vividly, with sharply articulate­d detail under the energetic direction Hans-christoph

Rademann. Something of the contrapunt­al intricacy, and the wonted brightness of the three trumpets, in the JS Bach is lost in the slightly recessed acoustic of the Forum am Schlosspar­k Ludwigsbur­g (not some Ludwig of Bavaria folly but a modern conference hall). Still, there is some fine work from the vocal and instrument­al soloists. To compare JS Bach’s soulful setting of ‘Quia respexit’, expressive­ly delivered here by soprano Miriam Feuersinge­r to the excitable CPE Bach version with tenor Patrick Grahl is to hear just how music had moved on between father and son. Bayan Northcott

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★

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