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The Critical Discographies from Choral Music On Records - Saint Matthew Passion Pages at the Teri Noel Towe Home Pages


Johann Sebastian Bach


The Critical Discographies from Choral Music On Records


This remarkable photograph is not a computer generated composite; the original of the Weydenhammer Portrait Fragment, all that remains of the portrait of Johann Sebastian Bach that belonged to his pupil Johann Christian Kittel, is resting gently on the surface of the original of the 1748 Elias Gottlob Haussmann Portrait of Johann Sebastian Bach.

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1748 Elias Gottlob Haussmann Portrait, Courtesy of William H. Scheide, Princeton, New Jersey
Weydenhammer Portrait Fragment, ca. 1733, Artist Unknown, Courtesy of the Weydenhammer Descendants
Photograph by Teri Noel Towe
©Teri Noel Towe, 2001, All Rights Reserved


The Critical Discographies from Choral Music On Records

Saint Matthew Passion, BWV 244


Saint Matthew Passion, BWV 244

The Straube/Ramin Tradition

The Mendelssohn-Bartholdy tradition was also diluted by prominent musicians from Leipzig. The ever growing revival of interest in authentic performance practice and in old instruments that had begun at the turn of the century caused the influential organist and pedagogue, Karl Straube, who was Thomascantor from 1916 to 1938, to be "born again" musicologically. He, who, in 1904, had published a performing edition of Bach organ works for the symphonic late 19th century Romantic organ, made an about face in the 1920s and espoused the cause of the return to a more authentic performance practice for Bach's music. But, at heart, this close friend of Max Reger was still a late Romantic. The "new" Leipzig style that he forged, and that he and his pupil Günther Ramin helped to popularize and disseminate, is, significantly, less classical and straight-forward than the Mendelssohn-Bartholdy style, and is, in essence, a thorough blending of the Mendelssohn tradition, Regeresque late Romanticism, and tenets of authentic performance practice.

A comparison of either the Weißbach or the Mauersberger sets with the Ramin recording
[20], for instance, will make the differences apparent. Straube's successor as Thomascantor, Ramin may have used smaller forces for his recording, made in the Thomaskirche in 1941, but his interpretation is much less straight forward. It is granitic and rough hewn from the opening measures, and it is neither as urgent nor as long phrased as the Weißbach or the Mauersberger. Ramin strives for and achieves a craggy monumentality and consciously avoids sentimentality. Karl Erb is the top drawer Evangelist, and the extraordinary Gerhard Hüsch sounds appropriately fresh and youthful as Jesus. Friedel Beckmann is the solid, golden voiced contralto. As mentioned earlier, the score is severely abridged, as was the practice in Thomaskirche performances in the early years of the 20th century. Ramin's son, Dieter, however, recalls that his father battled hard with the recordings' producers to prevent still further abridgements. A complete and uncut SMP with Ramin, dating from 1950, does, however exist, and it is to be hoped that it will soon be released commercially.

For better or for worse, the Straube/Ramin approach to the performance of the Bach vocal music, emphasizing as it did smaller ensembles, crisper articulation, and shorter phrases, seemed "closer" to Bach's own practice, and it was quickly espoused by a significant number of younger conductors. The most influential of these was Karl Richter, a student of Ramin's who emigrated to the West and established the Munich Bach Choir, a crack ensemble of upwards of ninety voices. His 1958 recording of the SMP, made for the authenticity minded Deutsche Grammophon Archiv Produktion label, had a tremendous impact on performers and listeners alike.
[47]

Somehow or other, Richter got the reputation of being the quintessential exponent of the modern German "neo-Baroque" style. For that reason alone, what is most remarkable about Richter's approach to the Saint Matthew Passion, and there are three commercial recordings and a television film version of it, is its unabashed Romanticism. While his is essentially a more polished form of the granitic Ramin interpretation, Richter proves to be more effusive than most conductors, and he has a decided preference for slow tempos. The tempo of the opening chorus, for instance, is a little slower than Mengelberg's; and the overall tactus is quite slow, too.

Of Richter's three commercial recordings, the first is indisputably the most convincing. The interpretation is still fresh, and the soloists overall are the most satisfying. Haefliger makes his recording début as the Evangelist, and it is immediately apparent that he was already one of the truly great interpreters of the rôle. Fischer-Dieskau is also splendid in the bass arias. The second recording , which appeared only in Japan, was issued as a memorial to the conductor and documents a concert performance given in Tokyo on May 29, 1969.
[48] While both the chorus and orchestra seem tired at times, the opening chorus and many of the other movements sound more chiseled and incisive. The tempos also seem even slower than on the 1958 recording. Another significant difference is the injection of a much more prominent organ continuo. In fact, the continuo realizations in general have become more florid. Haefliger is once again the tenor soloist, and the alto is the ever reliable Marga Höffgen.

The third and final recording , made shortly before Richter's sudden and premature death, is, sadly, no credit to his memory.
[49] While his spectacular interpretation of the B Minor Mass, BWV 232, stayed ever fresh, familiarity with the Saint Matthew Passion bred stagnation. Richter's grand conception of this score, which he clearly loved deeply, is marred by overinterpretation and fussiness. The opening chorus is now not only slow but also disjointed. There is a curious slackness about the turgid overall tactus that stands in sharp contrast to both his previous recordings and the relentless vigor of Klemperer's taut but deliberate pacing. And now, for the first time, the pulse and tempo of the narrative are pushed and pulled relentlessly. As disappointing as it is, Richter's valedictory recording of the Saint Matthew Passion has many strong points. Peter Schreier is a laudable successor to Ernst Haefliger as the tenor soloist, and the special clear, molten warmth of Janet Baker's voice brings a unique beauty to both "Buss und Reu" and "Erbarme Dich, mein Gott". Richter, incidentally, accompanies the Evangelist at the harpsichord.

Often thought of as the inheritor of Richter's mantle as the most prominent choral conductor in Germany, Helmuth Rilling, the founder of the Gächinger Kantorei of Stuttgart, is also very much an interpreter in the Straube/Ramin tradition. His Saint Matthew Passion, however, has more of the Mendelssohn-Bartholdy tradition in it than Richter's; it is brisker and more streamlined.
[50] The pacing is dramatic, almost operatic, but always tasteful. The solid group of soloists and impeccably trained chorus respond to Rilling's interpretative demands easily and gracefully. The 1741 gamba versions of "Mein Jesus schweigt" and "Geduld, Geduld" are used. Trivia buffs will be amused to note that David Thomas, now one of the foremost early music singers in the world, sings the part of Judas Iscariot in Rilling's recording.

A decade earlier, in 1965, Karl Münchinger, another conductor based in Stuttgart, made one of the few recordings of the Saint Matthew Passion in which a boys' choir is used.
[51] Like Richter, although not to the same degree, he opts for a slow overall pacing for his Raminesque account. All of the soloists are of high quality, yet it has to be said that Peter Pears is not in as good voice as he had been for Otto Klemperer a couple of years before. Elly Ameling is radiant and bright in the soprano solos, but it is the indescribably beautiful singing of the tragically short-lived tenor Fritz Wunderlich that makes the Münchinger set worth having. The 1741 forms of "Mein Jesus schweigt" and "Geduld, Geduld" are used.

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Endnotes

Alphabetical Discography

 

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P. S.: Please don't forget that, if you are interested in a thorough, accurate discography of the recordings of the Saint Matthew Passion that have appeared since the preparation of this article, you should go at once to Aryeh Oron's remarkable Bach Cantatas Website.

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