Contrasting vocal and instrumental, sacred and secular, the Dunedin Consort's 'Brandenburg/Cantata Series II' featured two of Bach's popular concerti grossi, flanked by a pair of sacred cantatas.
Instrumental contrast distinguished the cantatas as much as the concerti. BWV106, 'Gottes Zeit ist die allerbeste Zeit' (also known as Actus Tragicus) featured, in its opening Sonatina, lovely recorder writing, tenderly phrased by Pamela Thorby and Catherine Lathan. Few composers, writing a melodic passage for paired recorders which oscillates between two neighbouring notes, would have come up with Bach's imaginative treatment; one remained on the upper note while the other dropped and returned to unison. The pulsing dissonance created by this beautiful effect clinched the perfect tone for this funeral cantata – gravitas, free of sentimentality. The piece's symmetrical structure reflects the text's deliberation on the inevitability of death and, in particular, the effect of the resurrection-based 'new covenant' upon our perception of the event. This results in a magnificently odd central peak where alto, tenor and bass depart contrapuntal texture and ascend together. The solo soprano part, meanwhile, beautifully rendered by Susan Hamilton, beckons the Saviour. Alto Clare Wilkinson shone in the aria 'In deine Hände befehl ich meinen Geist' ('Into your hands I commend my spirit').
Bass Giles Underwood featured as a soloist in both cantatas – prominently in BWV152, 'Tritt auf die Glaubensbahn' ('Step forward on the way of faith'). Effortlessly reaching notes of subterranean depth, he was very assured and expressive. This cantata boasted a greater variety of timbre than BWV106, featuring a trio of oboe, recorder and violin in the opening Sinfonia. This was played with the joyous sense of purpose suggested by the title. By a miraculous coincidence, I was wondering, at the cantata's end, about the range of Giles Underwood's voice, when John Butt reappeared on stage offering a short and very entertaining elucidation of the vagaries of baroque pitch. The note A varying between 392 Hz (in France), 415 and Hz 465 Hz (our current A is now 440 Hz), it seems that European pitch beat Einstein to relativity by many years.