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Reviewer: Peter
Loewen In his notes, Laurence Dreyfus seems to anticipate the audience’s wonder at hearing a viol consort playing the music of Johann Sebastian Bach. His justification is based in historical precedent, pointing out the kinship between 18th-Century fugues and the viol fantasies of the 16th and 17th Centuries.
Bach’s chorale preludes are
related to cantus-firmus consort pieces like the “in nomine”. While all of
this may be true, the most compelling reason to play Bach’s most densely
wrought instrumental music on the viol is because it sounds fresh and
appealing. Bach’s contrapuntal achievements sparkle in the hands of
Phantasm. The program includes pieces from the Musical Offering, chorale preludes from ClavierübungIII, and Preludes and Fugues from The Well-Tempered Clavier. Tempos for the fugues are lively and perfectly managed. The homogenous sound of the viol consort brings continuity to the densely chromatic material in the
fugue from Prelude & Fugue in B-flat (WTC 2). The Chorale Prelude ‘Aus
Tiefer Not Schrei Ich Zu Dir’ (S 686) has richness that only a viol consort
can achieve. | |
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