153 CDs representing nearly four decades of Bach performance on
period instruments
“a lifetime’s exalted listening, invariably presented with love,
enthusiasm and conscientious musicianship.” - Gramophone
The Complete Bach Edition, 153 CDs in 12 volumes comprising
Bach’s complete works performed by world renowned Bach
interpreters on period instruments, constitutes one of the most
ambitious projects in history.
The Complete Bach Edition represents the culmination of a process
that began over five decades ago, in 1958, with the creation of
the DAS ALTE WERK label. After initially triggering an
impassioned controversy, Nikolaus Harnoncourt’s belief that
“Early music is a foreign language which must be learned by
musicians and listeners alike” has found widespread acceptance.
He and his colleagues searched for original instruments to throw
new light on composers and their works and significantly
influenced the history of music interpretation in the second half
of this century. Their ideas have been shared by many fellow
musicians, among them Ton Koopman, Il Giardino Armonico, Luca
Pianca and Andreas Staier, all of whose performances appear in
the COMPLETE BACH Edition. As an entirety, the Complete Bach
Edition offers listeners the chance to rediscover the astonishing
developments in Bach interpretation of the last forty years and
the tonal beauties of Bach’s works performed on period
instruments.
Without Nikolaus Harnoncourt’s and Gustav Leonhardt’s
groundbreaking accounts of the cantatas, a complete Bach edition
would have been inconceivable. But with the of Bach's
Complete Sacred Cantatas as inspiration, not to mention
Harnoncourt’s 1970 St. Matthew Passion and Gustav Leonhardt’s
legendary 1965 account of the Goldberg Variations, the early
1990's found Teldec in an extraordinary position: able to embark
on the artistic, financial and logistical adventure to record and
license s of the remainder of Bach’s oeuvre and present
a complete edition in time for the 250th anniversary of his
death.
From Schleicht, spielende Wellen, BWV 206, recorded by the
Monteverdi Choir Hamburg, Amsterdam Chamber Orchestra, Jürgen
Jürgens and André Rieu in 1963 to the Trio in A major, BWV 1025
with Werner Ehrhardt and Gerald Hambitzer recorded in April 1999,
COMPLETE BACH chronicles nearly four decades of Bach performance
on period instruments. By 1995, the year in which the project the
Complete Bach Edition was conceived, Teldec had already committed
approximately two thirds of Bach's oeuvre to disc. Subsequently
the company produced approximately twenty new s
specifically for The Complete Bach Edition. Many of these new
s were of works never before available on disc,
including chorales, as well as works for organ and works for
harpsichord.
Criteria for a Complete Bach Edition
The Complete Bach Edition includes all works that modern
scholarship regards as authentically composed by Johann Sebastian
Bach. Where Bach made extensive changes to works in order to
adapt them to meet the demands of later performances, the
alternative versions have also been included. Incomplete works
have been included when their musical substance was deemed
valuable, although where fragments consist of only a few bars,
these are not included. COMPLETE BACH also includes a handful of
reconstructions of lost works, the existence of which is fully
verified but which have not survived as such. Finally, a few
inauthentic pieces are included, where they are inextricably
associated with Bach’s name and are so familiar that their
exclusion would have been regretted.
“I have never felt that Bach’s work was in any way routine […].
Each new cantata, each new aria is an adventure, an exciting
discovery.I know of no other composer who explores the whole
range of music from the strictest counterpoint to romantic
expressionism and who at the same time pushes back the boundaries
of that world as comprehensively as Bach” - Nikolaus Harnoncourt
Groups of Works Included in Teldec’s Complete Bach Edition
Central to the Complete Bach Edition are the sacred cantatas,
recorded between 1971 and 1989 by the Concentus Musicus Wien
under Nikolaus Harnoncourt and the Leonhardt Consort under Gustav
Leonhardt with soloists including Barbara Bonney, Thomas Hampson,
Paul Esswood, Kurt Equiluz, Max van Egmond and Robert Holl. This
was the first complete edition of the sacred cantatas performed
on period instruments in the history of the gramophone and
remains so to this day. The set won the Erasmus Prize in 1980,
before it was even completed. Ton Koopman and his Amsterdam
Baroque Orchestra subsequently recorded the secular cantatas.
Bach wrote over 400 chorale settings but left no collection of
his own in the form of a published or publishable volume of
chorales. His pupil, Johann Philipp Kirnberger, went to great
lengths to make good this omission. Between 1784 and 1787 four
volumes appeared in print containing a total of 371 chorale
settings, most of which are familiar to us from the composer’s
cantatas, motets, oratorios and Passions. But there are around
186 chorales that cannot be ascribed to surviving works or were
part of lost compositions or teaching material. These have been
collected and recorded in their entirety for the first time ever
by the Rundfunkchor Berlin under its British-born conductor Robin
Gritton. With regard to the rarely performed or recorded
Schemelli Songs, there is disagreement about the authenticity of
several of these. For the Complete Bach Edition Teldec has
selected those known to be authentic and most likely to be
authentic; they are performed by Christoph Prégardien, Klaus
Mertens, Ton Koopman and Jaap ter Linden.
Bach’s fame in his own lifetime rested not only on his gifts as a
composer but also, and more especially, on his exceptional
abilities as an organist. Since 1994, Ton Koopman has recorded
Bach’s complete works for organ on famous historic organs in the
Netherlands and Germany. Foremost among these are the instruments
in Freiberg Cathedral, built by Gottfried Silbermann, an organ
builder with whom Bach had a professional association, and the
organ in Hamburg’s Jacobikirche, built by Arp Schnitger
For Bach’s complete works for keyboard, the Complete Bach Edition
has chosen to use the harpsichord. Included are such releases as
Gustav Leonhardt’s groundbreaking account of the Goldberg
Variations as well as recent s of Bach's transcriptions
of the sonatas after Reincken by Andreas Staier, toccatas by Bob
van Asperen and concertos, fugues and other works by
harpsichordist Michele Barchi. Barchi also plays the Suites BWV
996 and 997 on a historic lute-harpsichord specially built for
this Edition. Additional lute works are performed by Luca Pianca,
an internationally accled lutenist and theorbo player and a
co-founder of Il Giardino Armonico.
The Cello Suites were recorded by Nikolaus Harnoncourt in 1965
and appear in the Complete Bach Edition for the first time on CD.
The edition includes Bach's solo violin works performed by Thomas
Zehetmair and the violin sonatas performed by Alice Harnoncourt
(violin), Nikolaus Harnoncourt (viola da gamba) and ert
Tachezi (harpsichord).
Of the orchestral repertoire, the Brandenburg Concerti are
represented by the highly accled Il Giardino Armonico
s released in 1997. The orchestral suites are performed
by Nikolaus Harnoncourt and the harpsichord concerti by Gustav
Leonhardt.
Also included in the Complete Bach Edition are Nikolaus
Harnoncourt's 1970 legendary of the St Matthew Passion
with Concentus musicus Wien and the Arnold Schoenberg Chor as
well as his 1995 of the St John Passion with the same
forces.