Friday 16 May, 7.30pm
St. John’s, Smith Square
| Dorothee Mields |
soprano |
| Damien Guillon |
alto |
| Jan Kobow |
tenor |
| Stephan MacLeod |
bass |
| Collegium Vocale Gent |
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| Philippe Herreweghe |
conductor |
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| Philippe Herreweghe |
A Bach Spring
| Bach |
Easter Oratorio, BWV249 |
| Bach |
Cantata No.68 'Also hat Gott die Welt geliebt', BWV 68* |
| Bach |
Ascension Oratorio, BWV11 |
Pre-concert talk in St. John’s at 6.00pm
Philippe Herreweghe in conversation with Lindsay Kemp
A much-anticipated Lufthansa Festival debut by one of the world’s most admired Baroque choral conductors, whose performances of Bach have always been distinguished by their nobility and beauty of sound. This concert brings a reminder that the cantatas and oratorios composed for services at Leipzig’s Thomaskirche not only contain much of Bach’s most unjustly neglected music, but also sound out the rhythms of the passing year. His oratorios for Easter
and Ascension feature some of his most joyous choral writing mixed with solo numbers of great lyrical dignity and power; the Ascension Oratorio includes at its heart an early version of the moving Agnus Dei from the B minor Mass. In between comes Erhöhtes Fleisch und Blut, the cantata with which Bach marked Whit Monday 1724 in music as sweetly uplifting as a spring breeze.
‘By turns fervent and meditative, joyous and melancholy, [Bach’s Trinity cantatas] are here performed superbly by the Collegium Vocale Gent, which has become one of Europe’s foremost Baroque period ensembles under the direction of the pioneering Philippe Herreweghe.’ The Observer
Tickets £30, £24, £18, £12
NB: pre-concert talk free to concert ticket-holders
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Collegium Vocale Gent concert (Friday 16 May) is being recorded by BBC Radio 3 for broadcast in Performance on 3 at 7pm on Tuesday 20 May |
*change from the originally announced programme.
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