Good Night World · Adelaide Festival

Dietrich Buxtehude, Johann Sebastian Bach, Nicolaus Bruhns, Heinrich Schütz, Johann Wolfgang Franck, Philipp Heinrich Erlebach

The Thirty Years’ War ravaged Germany in the early 17th century. The population, traumatised by the violence of the conflict, needed consolation and hope. The Protestant faith emerged as a bulwark against the death that lurked in everyday life.

These political, economic and spiritual upheavals were reflected in the music of the time. The great polyphonies of the previous century gave way to much more intimate forms, inspired by the Pietist movement, which encouraged individual faith and pious living. Trostlieder (songs of consolation) began to appear, and music became the language of the soul, capable of soothing the deepest afflictions. The texts and melodies were designed to stir the emotions and edify Christians.

These short pieces, which move us with their humility, are imbued with a rare emotional intensity. And yet, despite their themes of mourning, sorrow and tears, they radiate a luminous clarity and serene confidence in the future. Death is but the threshold of deliverance and eternal bliss.

The young J.S. Bach was strongly influenced by these miniatures, as can be seen in the early cantatas that have come down to us.

Julie Roset, soprano
Maïlys de Villoutreys, soprano
Perrine Devillers, soprano
Blandine de Sansal, alto
William Shelton, alto
Laurence Kilsby, tenor
Davy Cornillot, tenor
Tomáš Král, bass
Renaud Brès, bass
René Ramos Premier, bass

Pygmalion, choir & orchestra
Raphaël Pichon, direction

Dates

Adelaide
March 2, 2028
19h
(Australie) Adelaide Town Hall
Adelaide
April 2, 2028
13h
(Australie) Adelaide Town Hall