Bach: St. Matthew Passion. Thomas Cooley, tenor; Paul Max Tipton, bass-baritone; Sherezade Panthaki, soprano; Reginald Mobley, countertenor; James Reese, tenor; Harrison Hintzsche, baritone; Cantata Collective conducted by Nicholas McGegan. AVIE. $44.99 (3 CDs).
An exceptionally clear-headed and clearly sung St. Matthew Passion from Cantata Collective shows just how meaningful Bach’s music remains in our secular age – and how involving it can be even for those without any particular faith, much less Bach’s Lutheranism. As was customary for Passions, Bach’s says nothing about Jesus’ Resurrection – its entire reason for being is to explore Christ’s pain and suffering, and the wrongs done to him in fulfillment of Biblical prophecies. The result is a far more humane-feeling work than would exist if the Resurrection, the central miracle of Christianity, were its core: this is a story about suffering and redemption, about betrayal and sacrifice. And on that basis, although it is religious through and through, Bach’s St. Matthew Passion becomes a vehicle for expressions of despair, fear, worry, and eventual hope – emotions thoroughly familiar even to audiences that do not share the belief system underlying the music.
What this means – and what is communicated with exceptional skill and beauty by Cantata Collective – is that the arias and choruses expressing everyday worshippers’ feelings about Jesus’ suffering, and reactions to it, take on greater emotional heft than does the foundational narrative about the events of Christ’s last days on Earth. The Gospel-based narrative is delivered everywhere with sensitivity and understanding by Thomas Cooley as the Evangelist, and the comments and proclamations of Jesus are handled with suitable gravity and intensity by Paul Max Tipton. But again and again, what impresses in this beautifully balanced performance are the thoughts and reactions of the everyday people of Jesus’ time, as expressed through choruses and the individual voices within them.
What Bach does with such brilliant sure-handedness in his St. Matthew Passion is to establish a grand layout – two orchestras and two choruses, plus soloists – and then generally use only selected elements among the available performers, reserving the massed forces for specific purposes. This approach becomes a way of emphasizing the emotional underpinnings of Scripture and its importance to the lives of ordinary people of Jesus’ time, and by extension of Bach’s era (and later periods as well). The careful and sensitive pronunciation of the work’s texts, even though these performers are not native German speakers, lends additional meaning to such statements as “the scourges and bonds and what you have endured – my soul has merited them.” It is undeniably true that the texts have full meaning and resonance only for those who share Bach’s religious beliefs, or other Christian ones. But it is also true that the expressiveness of Bach’s music creates a kind of transcendence of the spiritual material, allowing emotional participation in the St. Matthew Passion even by those who do not accept its narrative at face value.
The sheer quality of the vocal and instrumental performances under the absolutely first-rate direction of Nicholas McGegan makes this three-CD release from AVIE an outstanding one. McGegan’s unfailing and unfailingly stylish approach to the totality of the St. Matthew Passion as well as its individual elements produces a highly memorable experience from start to finish. Sherezade Panthaki, who sings the soprano arias and the words of Pilate’s wife, is especially commendable for purity of tone and lightness of delivery. The tenor arias are well-handled by James Reese, the bass ones and voice of Pilate by Harrison Hintzsche: everything is delivered with suitable but not overdone emotion and with close attention to the sound of the words and the way they blend with their instrumental underpinnings. Countertenor Reginald Mobley, who sings the alto parts, is a touch shaky and a bit over-emphatic from time to time, but on the whole gives a very creditable performance. And the small solo parts given to chorus members – Jennifer Paulino as the Maids whose comments lead to Peter disavowing Jesus three times, Jeff Fields as Peter, Chung-Wai Soong as Judas – are uniformly delivered with care and sensitivity. The instrumental material is excellent throughout, with the members of Cantata Collective, supplemented by additional performers, playing with strong understanding of period style and unflagging attention to balance and precision of intonation. Interestingly, this St. Matthew Passion reaches out all the more effectively beyond its core audience because of its sheer musicality: even a listener who does not understand the German text and does not try to follow a translation as the music progresses can be pulled into the emotional world of this work through the sheer loveliness of Bach’s music. Even the irreligious may thus be able to experience, to some extent, the feelings evoked by the substantial use of minor keys and dark instrumental coloration to express sorrow – and, eventually, hope – in the most beautiful way possible.