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Johann Sebastian Bach Harpsichord Concertos, BWV 1050, 1053, 1056 & 1057
Johann Sebastian Bach

Johann Sebastian Bach Harpsichord Concertos, BWV 1050, 1053, 1056 & 1057

Hanover Band

Label: Signum Classics
Format: CD
Barcode: 0635212076422
barcode
Catalog number: SIGCD 764
Releasedate: 04-08-23

Could you please describe what particularly distinguishes the harpsichord on this recording (a replica of an instrument by Jean-Claude Goujon from 1748) in terms of sound and technique?

Yes - this wonderfully sonorous and beautifully regulated double-manual instrument was expertly crafted by the celebrated British harpsichord maker, Andrew Garlick. It's hugely rewarding, in equal measure, to play and to listen to and its versatility offers so much to these extraordinary concertos. The rich texture created by the two choirs of 8’ strings used in combination produce a timbre of notable warmth; to this robust foundation can be added the 4’ register - which is voiced quite generously compared to many French-style instruments - resulting in an especially brilliant and invigorating full chorus. By contrast the subtle, yet characterful 8’ registers employed individually really sing - a quality which is hugely beneficial to Bach’s exceptional melodic writing in the slow movements.  

 

Considering what aspects did you decide upon scoring the orchestral parts soloistically?

 

It’s now generally accepted that these pieces were performed using single strings at the Café Zimmermann in Leipzig during Bach’s time. But aside from this historical consideration, this approach is hugely beneficial on a number of levels; firstly, the natural balance between the harpsichord and the bowed string instruments is enhanced considerably. This, in turn, allowed our recording engineer, Paul Crichton, to capture the sound as it really is in person, rather than having to unnaturally raise the level of the harpsichord, which can have the unfortunate effect of making the sound rather forced and dry. Also, whilst this is virtuoso music for the harpsichord, it’s also very much chamber music - each of the parts being of equal importance - and so this soloistic approach allows the players’ individual musical personality to shine through in each of the string parts.

“JS Bach’s seven concertos for solo harpsichord & strings, occupy a significant place in the history of music, marking as they do the origin of the keyboard concerto genre. Collectively, they encompass the gamut of Baroque rhetorical expression; indeed, leaving aside the six ground-breaking ‘Brandenburg’ Concerts avec plusieurs instruments, it is difficult to think of a more diverse, revolutionary and technically refined set of instrumental concertos from the Baroque period” - Andrew Arthur Their second recording on Signum Classics, The Hanover Band play-directed by Andrew Arthur present four of these revolutionary concertos, following their successful first album “BMV 1052, 1054, 1055 & 1058 Harpsichord Concertos”.