It can’t be often that one of the world’s pre-eminent Bach scholar-interpreters teams up with one of the world’s most famous period instrument ensembles to give a concert dedicated to one of the world’s most celebrated composers in one of the world’s most renowned acoustics. Such a combination of exemplars makes for an eye-catching promotional poster and, more importantly, an ear-catching performance. This was a fact not lost on the programmers of BBC Radio 3, who arrived at St George’s with their microphones, techies and radio-faces to broadcast this and subsequent concerts from the Bristol Baroque Festival of Music. Nor was it lost on Bristol’s public, who turned up en masse to fill the ex-Methodist church with eager ears, eyes and audience etiquette. They were not to be disappointed.
The concert featured two of those protean and evergreen concerti grossi known as the Brandenburgs, each coupled with a cantata making use of similar instrumentation. The contrast between concerto and cantata was interesting, if at times a little jarring, the boundless virtuosity and exuberance of the former clashing with the inwardness and poise of the latter. But then, such contrasts perfectly encapsulate the German Baroque in all its contradictory glory.
We began with the Brandenburg Concerto no. 4 in G, its piping and cooing recorders making for a sprightly and joyous opening. Every time I hear recorders in this sort of music, I think what an unfairly hard time they get in general. Derision and disdain at their simplicity and seeming lack of versatility stems from generations of “ABC for recorder” primary school failures, but here they showed their timbral worth in their polyphonic intertwinings with both ensemble and solo violin. Alison Bury’s violin was ever so slightly smudgy in the first couple of her solo sections, but gained clarity in time for those extraordinarily rapid scalic passages towards the middle of this first movement. In the Andante the pair of recorders showed a far more melancholy, mournful side, with Bach exploiting their fragile lower registers. The ensuing fugal Presto returned the mood to one of incandescent virtuosity, with the violin again flaunting its exhibitionist capacities, including some pretty incomprehensibly spasmodic bowing dexterity. Directed unobtrusively by Butt at the harpsichord, the music sparkled, though never dazzlingly so.
The instrumental soloists retired to the mid-stage ranks for Cantata no. 161, “Komm, du süße Todesstunde”, their positions at the fore being taken by four singers from the Choir of the Enlightenment. However, it was not with a chorus but a countertenor aria that the cantata began. Tim Mead, sporting a side-parting you could surf along, sang the sweet death-desiring Lutheran text with arresting beauty. Tenor Stuart Jackson’s aria was rather heavy and uninspiring in comparison, though the ensuing chorus was enlivened by the dancing recorder lines. The cantata ended with a highly chromatic and wonderful harmonisation of that most well-known of chorale melodies, known as the “Passion chorale”.