This release is part of a set of
Bach cantata recordings by the Belgian group
Il Gardellino and director
Marcel Ponseele: not an entire new
Bach cantata cycle but a set of thematically oriented recordings that may also include works by other composers. "De profundis" (from the depths) offers three cantatas based on Psalm 130, which begins with the words "From the depths I cry to thee, Lord" and was translated into German in several ways. The overall idea is close to that of
John Eliot Gardiner's cantata cycle, where cantatas were performed during their liturgically appropriate weeks;
Ponseele's approach is warm, text-centered, and reverential in tone. His ensemble, however, is entirely different from
Gardiner's;
Il Gardellino is a chamber group, with one instrument per part and a small choir of seven singers. The choir does not include the four soloists, which avoids one of the pitfalls of chamber-sized performances of this type; choir and soloists are clearly differentiated. They may, in fact, be too clearly differentiated; despite the small size of the group, the soloists are curiously distant in the mix.
Ponseele doesn't make any claims for the authenticity of the small-group approach, stating, a bit ungenerously, that "most discussions about performance practice are in fact devoid of any substance and relevance." His aim is to present
Bach cantata readings that offer, to use his term, "testimony." Those for whom the religious connotations of the term come to mind are on the right track, although
Ponseele is more about transcendence and less about specific religious attitude than
Gardiner is. These are very personal performances of
Bach, lyrical and sweet. The cantata by Graupner that closes the program is not on a level with
Bach, and there are various other quirks here that may or may not appeal to individual listeners, but
Ponseele has generally realized his unusual aims.