- EDITOR’S CHOICE
- 2018 · Lionel Meunier, Olivier Fortin, Ensemble Masques, Vox Luminis
Dietrich Buxtehude
- Tobias Nilsson, Anna Jobrant, Leif Aruhn-Solén, Magnus Kjellson, Göteborg Baroque, Karl Peter Eriksson, Amanda Flodin, Karin Dahlberg, Ann Kjellson
- Bartłomiej Stankowiak, Cantus Humanus, Karol Kozlowski, Marzena Michałowska, Piotr Olech, Marta Krysiak, Maciej Straburzyński, Arte dei Suonatori
Biography
Though his entire career was confined to Denmark and Hanseatic Lübeck, such was Buxtehude's reputation as an organist that J.S. Bach made a round trip of some 500 miles on foot to hear him. Buxtehude also produced some of the most original music of the 17th century. Thought to have been born in Denmark circa 1657, for four decades he occupied the organ loft of St. Mary’s Church, Lübeck. His increasingly ambitious evening concerts (Abendmusiken) attracted attention throughout Europe; and, as arguably the greatest organist of his age, Buxtehude lavished the fruits of the freewheeling stylus fantasticus (fantastic style) on his often flamboyant keyboard works. His sonatas for violin, viola da gamba and harpsichord published during the 1690s as “Op. 1” and “Op. 2” disclose a more private world of soulful soliloquising, tempered by jovial bonhomie. Membra Jesu Nostri (1680), a cycle of seven cantatas contemplating the body of the crucified Christ, remains a high point in an extensive and varied vocal legacy. After his death in 1707, Buxtehude’s reputation diminished, but, spearheaded by Brahms, his fortunes revived as the 19th century rediscovered a forgotten past.