By Oliver Condy

Published: Tuesday, 27 February 2024 at 15:33 PM


The Brandenburg Concertos are breathtaking in their instrumentation, counterpoint and orchestral texture. Here are recordings that bring out the best in these wonderful works.

The Brandenburg Concertos are one of the greatest musical CVs ever assembled. In 1721 Bach dedicated his score – in flowery French – to Christian Ludwig, Margrave of Brandenburg, not in fulfilment of a commission but more as a thinly disguised application for employment at the Margrave’s court.

The title ‘Brandenburg Concertos’ was dreamed up in the 19th century by Bach’s first biographer but, in fact, they were never conceived as a set nor intended specifically for the Margrave – Bach selected them from his back catalogue of works written while Kapellmeister at the court of Cöthen (1717-23).

Their wide-ranging instrumentation and virtuoso demands were designed to showcase Cöthen’s outstanding instrumentalists, whose talents seem to have spurred Bach on to explore the potential of the concerto form itself which he reinvented with each new work.

The best recordings of JS Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos

Rinaldo Alessandrini (director)Concerto Italiano (2005)Naïve OP30412

There are recordings of the Brandenburgs to suit every mood and taste, but while many conductors strive for a certain consistency of approach within their sets, Rinaldo Alessandrini sees each concerto as a new challenge requiring individually tailored solutions.

The essence of his set is not just variety between concertos but also within them, with a wide expressive range which nevertheless avoids attention-seeking novelty.

No. 1 comes off particularly well by contrasting a galloping first movement with an unexpectedly luxuriant and beautifully inflected slow movement, while in the final dash of dance movements the Polonaise is singled out for unusually mellow treatment.

Alessandrini never drives the music too hard, bending to the lilt of the dance and prizing supple elasticity and meaningful rhetorical gestures over mechanical rhythms and mindless speeding.

Every concerto balances the instruments differently. In Nos 1 and 2 the brass grab the limelight and deliver their parts with spittle-rattling glee, while in No. 5 Alessandrini, as soloist, is careful to balance his harpsichord with the gentler solo flute and violin.

This set offers an irresistibly expansive and effusive approach, right down to the immediacy of the recording and the vast breadth of the sound.