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Johann Pachelbel: Christ lag in Todesbanden
 
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Johann Pachelbel: Christ lag in Todesbanden

Pachelbel , Chamber Choir of Namur , Tubery , Claire Lefilliatre , Paulin Bündgen Audio CD
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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MP3 Download, 8 Songs, 2008 $6.99  
Audio CD, 2007 $18.09  

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song TitleArtist Time Price
listen  1. Toccata in CChoeur de Chambre de Namur 1:52$0.89 Buy Track
listen  2. Jauchzet dem Herrn (Motette)Choeur de Chambre de Namur 5:56$0.89 Buy Track
listen  3. Was Gott tut, das ist wohlgetan (Kantate)Choeur de Chambre de Namur 8:25$0.89 Buy Track
listen  4. Was Gott tut das ist wohlgetan (Partita)Choeur de Chambre de Namur 6:56$0.89 Buy Track
listen  5. Gott ist unser Zuversicht (Motette)Choeur de Chambre de Namur 4:00$0.89 Buy Track
listen  6. Christ lag in TodesbandenChoeur de Chambre de Namur 4:56$0.89 Buy Track
listen  7. Christ lag in Todesbanden (Kantate)Choeur de Chambre de Namur13:17$0.89 Buy Track
listen  8. Jauchzet dem Herrn (Kantate)Choeur de Chambre de Namur15:28$0.89 Buy Track


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Product Details

  • Performer: Claire Lefilliatre, Paulin Bündgen
  • Audio CD (November 13, 2007)
  • SPARS Code: DDD
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Ricercar
  • ASIN: B000SKJRLU
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #283,695 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Editorial Reviews

Despite the universal fame of Johann Pachelbel's beloved Canon in D, the tercentenary of his death went almost unnoticed in 2006. The present recording of Pachelbel cantatas thus fills an important gap in the discography related to the history of religious music in Germany in the Baroque period. One happily discovers a composer immersed in the polyphonic practice of central Germany, close to the ancestors of J.S. Bach and well aware of new influences from Italy. The compositions are organically linked to the melodies of Luther's chorales, and by their shape and size constitute an obvious link between the seventeenth century and the first cantatas of Johann Sebastian Bach.

Johann Pachelbel (1653-1706) was a prominent composer and organist of his era. While working at the Eisenbach court in Thüringen, he became a close friend of J.S. Bach's father, Johann Ambrosius Bach. As a parish musician, Pachelbel wrote most of his music for church services, especially for Mass and Vespers, when both singers and instrumentalists took part. His instrumental accompaniments are unusually rich. Although much of Pachelbel's music is lost, around twenty-six motets; nineteen "spiritual songs;" and thirteen Magnificats, geistliche Konzerte, and Masses have survived.


 

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Bach's Daddy?, December 11, 2011
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This review is from: Johann Pachelbel: Christ lag in Todesbanden (Audio CD)
Johann Pachelbel ( 1653-1706) was 32 years old when Johann Sebastian Bach was born (1685), just the right age to be his father. What's more, he was living in a Bach family house in Erfurt, a morning's carriage ride from Eisenach, JS's birthplace. But JS had already been 'assigned' a father by the Intelligent Musicologist: Johann Ambrosius (1645-1695), the court trumpeter in Eisenach and a composer in his own right. Pachelbel and J Ambrosius were close friends; the former stood as godfather to the latter's daughter Johanna Juditha. Pachelbel was also the music master of Johann Christoph Bach (1671-1721), Johann Sebastian's eldest brother, who would in time become the grudging music master of the greatest Bach of all, his younger brother JS.

As far as anyone can say with authority, JS Bach may never have know Pachelbel personally, may in fact have met him only once at age nine. But there's no question at all that the boy Bach heard performances of Pachelbel's music, both his cantatas/motets and his organ works. Pachelbel was exactly what JS would become, a virtuosic organist and a composer whose music seamlessly blended German and Italian structures and styles. Based chiefly on Bach's music for organ and harpsichord, musicologists have tended to minimize Pachelbel's influence on JS, asserting that the influence of North German composers, especially Buxtehude, was paramount. But those musicologist hadn't/haven't heard what YOU can hear on this recording of Pachelbel's cantatas and motets for voices and chamber orchestra, performed brilliantly by Jean Tubery with Les Acrémens and the Chaeur Chambre de Namur. The motet "Gott ist unser Zuversicht" is an absolute template for many of JS Bach's later cantatas, and a masterpiece of the genre in its own right.

No composer has ever been as 'mistreated' by his own musical notes as Pachelbel. It's that famous Canon in D that has obstructed our access to his real masterworks. Check the amazon product page for 'Pachelbel'. You'll find two dozen recordings of the Canon in D, played on every instrument from the Mighty Wurlitzer to the mouth harp, before you discover that Pachelbel wrote anything else. In days of yore, when I directed a 'wedding band', I used to charge 50% higher rates if the gig included the Canon in D. Not that it's a bad piece, mind you, but it's been battered and butchered until even the first two bars of the passacaglia evoke a thousand memories of audible misery.

This CD includes three organ fantasies: a brief Toccata and two extended partitas on familiar Lutheran chorales. The organ fantasy on "Christ lag in Todesbanden" is followed by Pachelbel's cantata setting of all seven verses of the chorale, for soprano, alto, obbligato bassoon and continuo. Even non-Lutheran music lovers will know that sublimely sorrowful chorale, which every significant German Baroque composer set. All Bachophiles will also know "Jauchzet dem Herrn", a chorale that Pachelbel employed in his Motette for Double Choir and Continuo, and again in his Cantata for SATB voices, choir, two cornettos, bassoon and continuo. Actually, Pachelbel's score called for two oboes, rather than two cornettos, but once you've heard the cornettos of Jean Tubery and Kumiko Ueno, "you'll never look back!"

The third Cantata on this CD is "Was Gott tut, das ist wohlgetan" -- What God Does is Well Done -- another chorale glorified by JS Bach and others. This 16-minute musical celebration of The Almighty is score for SATB soloists, choir, strings, bassoon, and continuo. One of the soloists is the inimitable tenor Hans Jörg Mammel, the first choice of so many baroque ensembles from Japan to Canada to Austria. He's good, the choir is good, the orchestra is good, Jean Tubery is divine, and Pachelbel is more than a "minor composer".
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