Monteverdi
 

 
 
 
John Eliot Gardiner:
The Guardian
Sep 2010
Brandenburg Concertos at the Proms' Bach Day
The Independent
Aug 2010
Brandenburg Concertos at the Proms' Bach Day
Classicalsource.Com
Aug 2010
B Minor Mass at the Aldeburgh Music Festival
The Irish Times
Jun 2010
Mass in B Minor, at the Brighton Dome
The Times
May 2010
LSO/ Gardiner at the Barbican
The Times
Feb 2010
LSO/Gardiner, Barbican, London
Financial Times
Feb 2010
LSO, Gardiner, Barbican Hall
TheArtsDesk.com
Feb 2010
Gardiner conducts the LSO: A meeting of the minds over Beethoven
Gramophone blog
Feb 2010
Lunch with the FT: John Eliot Gardiner
Financial Times
Jan 2010
Haydn's “Die Schöpfung” (The Creation) at Carnegie Hall
New York Times
Oct 2009
Haydn's “Die Jahreszeiten” (The Seasons) at Carnegie Hall
New York Times
Oct 2009
"Israel in Egypt" Fundraising Concert
TheArtsDesk.com
Sep 2009
Israel in Egypt at the Edinburgh International Festival
The Scotsman
Sep 2009
Bach Motets concert at the Proms
THE FINANCIAL TIMES
Jul 2009
JC Bach concert at Cadogan Hall
THE TIMES
Apr 2009
JC Bach concert at Cadogan Hall
THE GUARDIAN
Apr 2009
Residency at Spitalfields Music
THE OBSERVER
Jan 2009
Residency at Spitalfields Music
THE TIMES
Jan 2009
Residency at Spitalfields Music
THE SUNDAY TIMES
Jan 2009
Residency at Spitalfields Music
MUSIC OMH
Jan 2009
Residency at Spitalfields Music
BACHTRACK.COM
Jan 2009
Residency at Spitalfields Music
THE TIMES
Dec 2008
Residency at Spitalfields Music
THE GUARDIAN
Dec 2008
Residency at Spitalfields Music
THE TIMES
Dec 2008
Residency at Spitalfields Music
THE INDEPENDENT
Dec 2008
Residency at Spitalfields Music
MUSIC OMH
Dec 2008
Residency at Spitalfields Music
THE INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY
Dec 2008
Residency at Spitalfields Music
THE FINANCIAL TIMES
Dec 2008
Residency at Spitalfields Music
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH
Dec 2008
Edinburgh International Festival
THE TIMES/YouTube
Nov 2008
Brahms: Roots and Memories
THE TIMES
Oct 2008
Brahms: Roots and Memories
THE EVENING STANDARD
Oct 2008
Brahms: Roots and Memories
THE GUARDIAN
Oct 2008
Brahms: Roots and Memories
FRANKFURTER RUNDSCHAU
Oct 2008
Brahms: Roots and Memories
FRANKFURTER NEUE PRESSE
Oct 2008
Brahms: Roots and Memories
FRANKFURTER NEUE PRESSE
Oct 2008
St James's Church, Spanish Place, Schuetz and Durufle
INDEPENDENT
Jul 2008
St James's Church, Spanish Place, Schuetz and Durufle
THE TIMES
Jul 2008
St James's Church, Spanish Place, Schuetz and Durufle
DAILY TELEGRAPH
Jul 2008
SDG128 Bach Cantatas Vol 22
Musiccriticsm.com
Jan 2008
SDG Bach Cantata Series
Music Web International
Nov 2007
Brahms and his antecedents - a twenty-first century approach
THE TELEGRAPH
Oct 2007
Brahms and his antecedents - a twenty-first century approach
THE GUARDIAN
Oct 2007
Brahms and his antecedents - a twenty-first century approach
THE TIMES
Oct 2007
Brahms and his antecedents - a twenty-first century approach
THE FINANCIAL TIMES
Oct 2007
Brahms and his antecedents - a twenty-first century approach
THE INDEPENDENT
Oct 2007
Brahms and his antecedents - a 21st-century approach
THE EVENING STANDARD
Oct 2007
Rameau 'Spectacular', Royal Albert Hall, London, 15 July 2007
THE INDEPENDENT
Jul 2007
Rameau 'Spectacular', Royal Albert Hall, London, 15 July 2007
THE FINANCIAL TIMES
Jul 2007
Rameau 'Spectacular', Royal Albert Hall, London, 15 July 2007
CLASSICAL SOURCE.COM
Jul 2007
Rameau 'Spectacular', Royal Albert Hall, London, 15 July 2007
THE GUARDIAN
Jul 2007
Rameau 'Spectacular', Royal Albert Hall, London, 15 July 2007
THE EVENING STANDARD
Jul 2007
Rameau 'Spectacular', Royal Albert Hall, London, 15 July 2007
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH
Jul 2007
Rameau 'Spectacular', Royal Albert Hall, London, 15 July 2007
THE TIMES
Jul 2007
When Soweto got Baroque
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH
Jul 2007
Rameau 'Spectacular', Festival Via Stellae, Spain, 11 July 2007
EL PAIS, SPAIN
Jul 2007
Rameau 'Spectacular', Festival Via Stellae, Santiago, Spain, 11 July 2007
LA VOZ DE GALICIA, SPAIN
Jul 2007
Haydn 'Die Jahreszeiten', Barbican, London
THE GUARDIAN
Mar 2007
Haydn 'Die Jahreszeiten', Barbican, London
THE FINANCIAL TIMES
Mar 2007
Rameau 'Castor et Pollux' Salle Pleyel, Paris
LE MONDE
Feb 2007
Rameau 'Castor et Pollux' Salle Pleyel, Paris
LE FIGARO
Feb 2007
Rameau and his dancers, Cite de la Musique, Paris
LE MONDE
Feb 2007
Bach Advent Cantatas, Cadogan Hall, London
THE TIMES
Dec 2006
Bach Advent Cantatas, Cadogan Hall, London
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH
Dec 2006
Bach Advent Cantatas, Cadogan Hall, London
THE GUARDIAN
Dec 2006
Bach Advent Cantatas, Cadogan Hall, London
EVENING STANDARD
Dec 2006
Le Mozart Enchanté de Gardiner
CONCERTCLASSIC.COM
Oct 2006
Mozart Gala, Royal Opera House
MUSICOMH.COM
Oct 2006
Mozart Gala, Royal Opera House
THE FINANCIAL TIMES
Oct 2006
Mozart 250th Concert, Royal Opera House
MUSICOHM.COM
Oct 2006
Great Venetians, Royal Albert Hall, London
THE GUARDIAN
Jul 2006
Great Venetians, Royal Albert Hall, London
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH
Jul 2006
Great Venetians, Royal Albert Hall, London
THE TIMES
Jul 2006
Great Venetians, Royal Albert Hall, London
CLASSICAL SOURCE
Jul 2006
Classical Midnight in Kensington
THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH
Jul 2006
Mozart 250th Birthday Concert, Cadogan Hall
THE FINANCIAL TIMES
Feb 2006
Mozart to go
GRAMOPHONE
Feb 2006
  

Reviews

THE SUNDAY TIMES

Residency at Spitalfields Music (14 Jan 2009)

John Eliot Gardiner’s Monteverdi Choir and English Baroque Soloists launched their millennial Bach Pilgrimage — performing all 200 or so of the composer’s liturgical cantatas on a year-long tour around Europe and to New York — at Christmas time in Weimar with the Christmas Oratorio. Although it is usually performed as a single entity, Bach conceived the “oratorio” as a six-part celebration covering the entire Christmas period, with individual cantatas for each of the feast days.

Nine years later, Gardiner has returned to these works, presenting them in short one-hour-plus concerts (all but the first given twice in an evening) and programmed with other Bach in sets of six: the motets and Brandenburg Concertos. This is a felicitous example of Gardiner’s interest in creating musical events, rather than mere one-off concerts. His reverence for Bach — he writes in the programme that, for him, “Christmas without Bach is unthinkable” — requires a grander concept than simply a traditional yuletide performance of the oratorio, and the Spitalfields Winter Festival, in the near-ideal setting of Hawksmoor’s masterpiece, Christ Church, has given him the opportunity to spread the musical celebrations either side of Holy Week. The first half of Gardiner’s mini Bach fest happened earlier in December; the last three cantatas will be performed on January 5, 7 and 8.

Times have changed since the heady days of the 1980s, when Gardiner’s Monteverdi and EBS forces recorded most of the large-scale Bach works, with starry soloists, for Deutsche Grammophon’s early-music label, Archiv. Gardiner is older and wiser, and, with typical resourcefulness, has embraced the new austerity as an opportunity and a challenge. He looks as grand and commanding as ever, but the full concert fig of white tie and tails has been abandoned in favour of a dour-looking black version of a Chairman Mao shirt, its only concessions to flamboyance fluorescent lime-green cuffs — useful for conducting in a power cut, no doubt.

Gardiner is one of the most physically imposing conductors in the business, but his manner has become more genial and collaborative. The big solo names may have vanished from the playbills, but he seemed happier coaxing broad smiles from his mostly youthful choir as they launched into the jaunty opening chorus of the first cantata, Jauchzet! Frohlocket! (“Rejoice and be merry”). I don’t recall seeing the Monterverdi Choir enjoying themselves as much as this in years.

With all the tribulations, as well as triumphs, of their Bach year (Gardiner writes passionately about them in his unputdownable travelogue, emerging in parts in the booklets for the live recordings his own label, Soli Deo Gloria, is issuing of the Pilgrimage concerts), they have clearly bonded. The ethos of the Monteverdi Choir has always been to nurture young singers — and to combine the best of professional and amateur — and his work continues to bear rich fruit in this respect. It is hard to think of another choir of this type and size — about 40, on the large side for Bach in these minimalist days — that sings with such commitment and splendour, words and music given equal value.

This is one aspect of Gardiner’s Bach, of course, that hasn’t much changed. He has always argued in favour of large forces,especially in the great “festive” works, the two Passions, the B Minor Mass and these Christmas compositions, which deploy unusually rich orchestral forces — different for each cantata — with trumpets and drums to evoke the angelic throng. In line with the minimalists, however, he now — probably rightly — regards the Brandenburg Concertos as chamber rather than “orchestral” music, with one player to a part and no conductor.

That may have explained the slight drop in temperature, at the opening concert, between the ardent pleading of the motet Komm, Jesu, Komm and the trumpet jollification of the Christmas cantata, when a small EBS ensemble played a routine but characterless account of the most unorthodox Brandenburg Concerto, the violinless No 6 for violas, viole da gamba, cello and bass. The lack of bright upper-string tones made it all sound both wheezy and muddy in Christ Church’s reverberant acoustic. At my second concert, Brandenburg No 5 — the one with important flute, violin and keyboard solos — fared better, though Matthew Halls had to wait for the astonishing harpsichord cadenza at the end of the first movement to make his presence felt.

The soloists, drawn from the chorus, were variable, but Nicholas Mulroy (tenor/Evangelist) narrated the Christmas story with crystalline diction and a pleasingly plangent tone, and Matthew Brook made something both grand and slightly ironic of singing Grosser Herr, o starker König (Great Lord and Strong King) four feet from the Prince of Wales, who was sitting in the front row. Brook is a rising star.

Samuel Evans, his younger bass colleague in the third cantata, Herrscher des Himmels (Ruler of Heaven), is also a singer of immense promise. Their solos were highlights, and the chorus of shepherds, positively scampering Bethlehemwards in this cantata of glad tidings, put everyone in the Christmas spirit.

Hugh Canning

entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/music/live_reviews/article5403309.ece

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