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Passion selon
St. Marc
BWV 247
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| Compositeur |
Johann
Sebastian Bach ( 1685 - 1750 )
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| Date
de composition |
1731
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| Texte |
Christian
Friedrich Henrici ( alias Picander )
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Reconstruction
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Ton Koopman
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| Chef |
Ton Koopman
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| Orchestre/Choeur |
Amsterdam
Baroque Orchestra
Amsterdam Baroque Choir
Boys of the Breda Sacrament Choir
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| Solistes |
Sibylla
Rubens, Soprano ( Testis I, Ancilla )
Bernhard Landauer, Alto
Christoph Prégardien, Ténor ( Evangéliste )
Paul Agnew, Ténor ( Pétrus, Judas, Miles, Centurio )
Peter Kooy, Basse ( Christus )
Klaus Mertens, Basse ( Pontifex, Pilatus, Testis II )
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| Date
de parution |
Mars
2000
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| Label |
Erato
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| Catalogue |
8573
80221-2
2 CD
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Durée
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118' 23 |
Enregistrement/Date
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Waalse Kerk,
Amsterdam
Septembre 1999
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Markus Passion
Apart from the St.Matthew- and St.John Passion, Bach also composed a St.Mark Passion in
1731, performed in the same year with text by Picander. Unfortunately the music of this
passion was lost, only the text remained.
The efforts to retrace the music have been numerous and we have to fear that we will never
find it again, as so many of Bach's other lost works.
It appears to be possible to reconstruct the St.Mark Passion by using a method which was
customary for Bach and his contemporaries, called parody. It means that certain
chorals and aria's were reused in other works by the composer. The most significant
examples of parody by Bach are his Christmas Oratorio and his B-Minor Mass. Bach even
reused in this last work a movement from one of his earliest cantatas.
It often happened (see his Christmas Oratorio) that chorals, duets and aria's from secular
cantatas were incorporated in church cantatas and oratorios after which they were provided
with spiritual text. Trying this out on the St.Mark Passion, it appears that we find many
possibilities to retrace chorals and aria's in several works, on which Picander's text
fits extremely well as regards meaning and metrical foots.
Without ever knowing for certain, it may even be possible that we retrace in this way part
of the real St.Mark Passion by Bach. In his works we find such a great number of chorals,
that possible problems of that order also appear to be solvable. Only one real problem
remains to be solved: Bach never reused his recitatives. These are lost forever. We can
borrow them from other compositions, or have them recited or compose them ourselves. I
have decided to compose the recitatives myself in the hope that our vast experience by
currently recording all Bach cantata's for ERATO will make Bach's language increasingly
evident and understandable.
I know it to be a difficult task to complement Bach's genial works, but I have no other
choice then to take the risk. Furthermore, I have chosen other chorals, aria's and duets
than my predecessors did in their reconstruction of the St.Mark Passion.
I sincerely hope that Bach would have been happy with my effort.
Ton Koopman - june 1998
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