In search of Bach · Mass in B minor

Johann Sebastian Bach

The final episode of this epic journey will take place on the Baltic coast, in the city of Lübeck, the destination of J.S. Bach’s journey in 1705. After crossing Lake Ratzeburg by boat, the troupe will make a final 20 km walk to enter the former capital of the Hanseatic League on foot. After a concert at St. Jakobi Church, Pygmalion will conclude these Bach Paths with J.S. Bach’s Mass in B minor, BWV 232, at the Dom.

The end of this journey will coincide with the ensemble’s 20th anniversary!

“A D. Terribly high, a desperate third of the key of B minor, surpassing the peaks of the treble clef. An extreme note, screaming, strident, yet forbidden, proscribed as the opening of any work.
Which performer has not been struck, on discovering the score of the Mass in B minor, by this very first note given by Bach to the first violins? Kyrie… Kyrie… Kyrie eleison ! It is indeed with a cry already reaching the forbidden ends of the tessitura, a cry of all humanity, an exordium of purely tragic urgency, that this work-summa, unprecedented in its dimensions in our history, opens. A visionary synthesis of the art of a man who, here more than anywhere else, gives meaning to the world in which he lives, and reveals to us all that lies beyond.
Thirty years of gestation, thirty years of a laborious life at the end of which the diversity of his creations seems to have been brought together in total order. A mosaic of eclectic origins, yet with a new, luminous unity. Looking back on a life rich in a thousand languages, here is a work that is now “Pentecostal”, drawing its depth from the diversity of its languages. A true ecumenical testament, in search of a synthesis of worlds, through tolerance, assimilation and integration of all. Thirty years of obligations, constraints and servitude, from which Bach here seems to take leave to embrace the universal.” (Raphaël Pichon)

Maïlys de Villoutreys, soprano
Eva Zaïcik, soprano
Lucile Richardot, alto
Zachary Wilder, tenor
Christian Immler, bass

Choir
Armelle Cardot, Adèle Carlier, Anne-Emmanuelle Davy, Eugénie de Padirac, Marie Planinsek, Maïlys de Villoutreys, sopranos 1
Anouk Defontenay, Perrine Devillers, Alice Foccroulle, Nadia Lavoyer, Lia Naviliat Cuncic, Eva Zaïcik, sopranos 2
Corinne Bahuaud, Philippe Barth, Rita Filipe, Lewis Hammond, Marie Pouchelon, Lucile Richardot, altos
Guillaume Gutierrez, Constantin Goubet, Vincent Laloy, Randol Rodriguez, Ryan Veillet, Zachary Wilder, tenors
Étienne Bazola, Renaud Brès, Christian Immler Guillaume Olry, René Ramos Premier, Viktor Shapovalov, Emmanuel Vistorky, bass

Orchestra
Sophie Gent, Béatrice Linon, Ravenna Lipchik, Sophia Prodanova, Roxana Rastegar, violins 1
Louis Creac’h, Sandrine Dupé, Izleh Henry, Raphaëlle Pacault, violins 2
Katya Polin, Katherine Goodbehere, Anna Sypniewski, violas
Julien Léonard*, viola da gamba
Antoine Touche*, Cécile Vérolles, cellos
Thomas de Pierrefeu*, double bass
Georgia Browne, Raquel Martorell Dorta, flutes
Jasu Moisio, Lidewei de Sterck, Robert de Bree Bassons, oboes
Evolène Kiener, Javier Zafra, bassoons
Emmanuel Mure, Philippe Genestier, Emmanuel Alemany, trumpets
Anneke Scott, horn
Koen Plaetinck, timpani
Thibaut Roussel*, theorbo
Pierre Gallon*, organ
Ronan Khalil*, harpsichord
*continuo

Raphaël Pichon, conductor

Dates

Lübeck
May 30, 2026
18h
Dom (Germany)