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Notes
Along with Vivaldi’s ‘Seasons’ or Beethoven’s ‘Fifth’, Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos belong to those works that are so well-known that we risk taking them for granted. In order to (re-)discover the special qualities that can inspire us today, in 2001 Thomas Dausgaard and the Swedish Chamber Orchestra decided to contact six contemporary composer, asking each of them to compose a companion piece to one of the concertos. Seventeen years later, in 2018, it was time to present the result, with a performance at the BBC Proms of all the works – new and old. Recorded over a period of 18 months leading up to this event, the present boxed set provides a unique opportunity to experience six very different musical minds and idioms entering into conversation with Bach: Mark-Anthony Turnage, Steven Mackey, Anders Hillborg, Olga Neuwirth, Uri Caine and Brett Dean. Bach’s concertos are remarkable in that they are all scored for different instrumental combinations, and part of the brief to the group of composers was to reflect this. In her Aello, Olga Neuwirth has for instance used several ‘instruments’ to stand in for Bach’s harpsichord, including a synthesizer, a milk frother and a typewriter. Brett Dean, on the other hand, has stayed very close to Bach’s instrumentation, but has chosen to write his work as a preparation for Brandenburg Concerto No. 6 – an Approach to Bach’s extremely tight canonic writing. In performing the twelve works the orchestra and Dausgaard are joined by leading soloists including Clare Chase, Mahan Esfahani, Håkan Hardenberger, Pekka Kuusisto and Tabea Zimmermann.
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Reviews
Assorted Programs category – Nominee
International Classical Music Awards 2022
**** (Excellent Album)
Jérémie Bigorie – Classica magazine (France) – November 2021
“… There’s no doubting Dausgaard has accomplished his mission to make us hear these pieces differently. His ‘Brandenburg Project’ is nourishing and frequently a lot more …”
Andrew Mellor – Gramophone magazine – August 2021
“A bold experiment – many enjoyable performances, occasional moments of revelation but ultimately a brilliantly recorded souvenir of a well-intentioned idea.”
Richard Hanlon – MusicWeb-International.com – 5 August 2021
Performance **** Recording ****
Bayan Northcott - BBC Music magazine - August 2021
“… The playing is flawless throughout both from the Swedish Chamber Orchestra and all of the esteemed soloists. There is strong chemistry with the musicians who share in Dausgaard’s vision. The detailed BIS SACD recordings allow the musicianship to sparkle eloquently and all of the individual lines to be appreciated. The contemporary pieces are not pastiches of their predecessors; they are works mostly in their own right using modern and contrasting idioms, while showcasing admirable, diverse and innovative writing. They are mostly challenging and demanding, even to experienced listeners, while not offering the same rewards as Bach’s equally innovative Brandenburgs. As a concept this is an intriguing and creative program indeed, but in execution it makes for a highly specialist album.”
Leighton Jones – theclassicreview.com – 21 May 2021
Pizzicato Supersonic
“… The leaders of the Swedish Chamber Orchestra have now come up with something particularly fine. First of all, they engaged a lot of well-known soloists for the concertos themselves, such as Mahan Esfahani, Ante Weithaas, Hakan Hardenberger, Tabea Zimmermann, Pekka Kuusisto, Göran Fröst or Claire Chase. And they commissioned six composers to write a supplementary work for a particular concerto, to be heard after the first five Brandenburgs and before them in the case of the sixth. These new pieces were to have more or less the same instrumentation as the Bach concertos. It is also striking that these new compositions are not short commentaries, as one has experienced with such Bach modern projects, but substantial works … the interpretations of the Bach concertos alone could have served for an exciting complete recording. This is due to the cast of soloists, who without exception tackle their tasks with great playfulness, and provide, together with Dausgaard’s very personally conducting, one of the most lush, ornate, contrasting, flourishing, detailed, colorful, and dancing interpretations I know … All in all, a grandiose result has been achieved in this production, a feast for the ear of a kind one all too rarely gets to hear, a subtly and differentiatedly realized performance whose effect one cannot escape, not least because Bach has more to say here than I ever got to hear. Dausgaard’s conducting is phenomenal. But the new works are also worth hearing and ultimately then make the project something very special…”
Remy Franck – Pizzicato.com – 13 April 2021
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