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Bachfest Leipzig 2025

09 Wednesday Jul 2025

Posted by cantatasonmymind in Cantatas, Leipzig, Travel

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Adina Apartment Hotel Leipzig, Alex Potter, Anna-Sylvia Goldammer, Apartmenthotel Quartier M., Bach, Bach Akademie Stuttgart, Bach-Archiv Leipzig, Bachakademie Stuttgart, Bachfest 2025, Bachfest 2026, Bachfest Leipzig, Bachfest Leipzig 2025, Bachfest Leipzig 2026, Bachfest Malaysia, Bachstiftung, BWV 198, BWV 20, BWV 233, BWV 79, Christiane Mariana von Ziegler, Christiane Mariane von Ziegler, Collegium Vocale Gent, Continuum Berlin, David Chin, David de Winter, Elina Albach, Gardiner, Hans-Christoph Rademann, Heinrich Schütz, Innside Leipzig, J.S. Bach Foundation, J.S. Bach Stiftung, Johann Hermann Schein, johann-sebastian-bach, Koopman, linden trees, Maria Küstner, Merseburg, Merseburger Dom, Michael Maul, Miriam Feuersinger, Motel One Leipzig, Nikolaikirche, Patrick Grahl, Philippe Herreweghe, Rick Fulkner, Romanus-Haus, Rudolf Lutz, Schütz, Schein, Solomon's Knot, Thomaskirche, Tobias Berndt, Tomáš Král, Wir glauben all an einen Gott

Romanus-Haus in Leipzig, the house where poet Christiane Mariane von Ziegler held salons in the 1720s and 1730s.

I visited Bachfest Leipzig again this year, from Tuesday evening, June 17, through Sunday, June 22, attending eight concerts in six days. Read my highlights below, and please subscribe to this blog so you don’t miss future posts. I joined a festival trip to Merseburg, took walks, caught up with friends from all over the world, and met some new fellow Bach lovers. For me, the camaraderie has almost become a more important reason to return each year than the concerts.

That said, next year’s cantata programming is not to be missed, with Herreweghe AND Lutz AND Rademann, so if you would like to attend you should probably get organized – my tips for that at the end of this post.

Summer in Leipzig

June is the perfect time of year in this city. People are out on café terraces everywhere, and walking in the streets. Then there’s the summer green: entire rose bushes for sale on the street in the middle of the center, and linden trees in bloom wherever you go. The scent of linden delights me, and I learned something new about them this year, thanks to our Bachfest tour guide Anna-Sylvia Goldammer on the organ trip to Merseburg: Leipzig has apparently always been full of linden trees! The latin word for Leipzig, Lipsi, was derived from the Slavic word for linden tree, lipa. Most of downtown, inside the ring, is car-free, with only taxis and necessary vehicles allowed in. This makes it feel safe and, dare I say it, more walkable than Amsterdam.

The free performances can be the most meaningful

Inspired by a seatmate on the trip to Köthen last year, I attended more of the free or almost-free performances this year. You can still fully enjoy the camaraderie with other Bach fans and hear beautiful music without spending a fortune. There are no assigned seats for the church services, so as long as you line up early, you can enjoy the best view for free.

This year I had missed the free performances on the market square, but on Saturday morning, June 21, I was so lucky to attend an unforgettable, absolutely exquisite rendition of the duet from Cantata 79 Gott der Herr ist Sonn und Schild by soprano Miriam Feuersinger and baritone Tobias Berndt during the “Mette” (morning service) in the Nikolaikirche. The Sunday morning service in the Thomaskirche was special too. The service was a reconstruction of what a church service in Bach’s time would have been like (I could write an entire blog post about that!), I got to hear Johannes Lang play the organ, Tomáš Král sing the bass arias in Cantata 20 O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, and tenor Patrick Grahl sing not only the tenor aria in that cantata but also the cantor-bits in the service as well as the reading from the New Testament (yes this was sung, beautiful!). But I also happened to sit and sing (in the congregational singing) next to the 80-year-old father of choir director Maria Küstner. With great determination he had climbed all the stairs to the balcony, even though he was walking with a cane. When after the service I thanked him for his clear and confident singing, he told me that decades ago, on frequent car trips between Leipzig and Berlin, he would sing Luther’s “Wir glauben all an einen Gott” (one of the Lutheran chorales we had just sung in the service) to keep himself and the family awake. I forgot to ask him if this was still during GDR time, but it might very well have been.

Catching up with David Chin

This year I also finally had the opportunity to have lunch with David Chin, director of Bachfest Malaysia and creator of the excellent documentary Encountering Bach which I have referenced already a few times on this blog. We started conversations on Facebook during the Covid pandemic after David published his first episodes of the documentary, then met in person at the Thüringer Bachwochen in 2022, but only managed to say a few quick hellos at last year’s Bachfest. So grateful it worked out to talk this year!

Concert highlights: Alex Potter and David de Winter

Alex Potter in the Nikolaikirche on June 17. Photo courtesy of Sascha Wolff.

I had only just arrived to Leipzig on Tuesday June 17. I had not even unpacked yet, but I had a chance to hear “Missa Miniatura,” Elina Albach’s adaptation of Bach’s Mass in B Minor again, and I am a big fan of that production. So I ate a quick dinner and made it to the Nikolaikirche just in time. Alex Potter’s stunning rendition of the Agnus Dei at this concert was definitely a highlight of this Bachfest for me. In order to have a bit more acoustic, he had climbed up a few steps so he stood directly under an arch in the Nikolaikirche. Thanks to Sascha Wolff for capturing that moment on photo. After this aria I felt “we can now all die happily.” The other aria that transported me to a similar state of bliss was David de Winter’s “Der Ewigkeit saphirnes Haus” from Cantata 198 Laß, Fürstin, laß noch einen Strahl with Solomon’s Knot on Friday, June 20, in the Evangelisch-Reformierte Kirche. I had never heard this aria sung so beautifully.

Bach’s “50 best cantatas” by Lutz, Herrewege, and Rademann, Vox Luminis, Koopman, and Gardiner in 2026 – how to get organized

Disclaimer: I’m not getting paid to write this. Below is a reflection of my personal opinion and personal interpretation of the information that is available at the time of writing this blog post. I do not accept responsibility if your experience is different. I just thought it might be helpful to curate the information from various websites for you.

Anyone reading this who has visited Bachfest in the last few years: please feel free to add your own advice in the comments. Thank you!

Next year’s cantata programming at the festival is going to be a hit parade of the “50 best cantatas” (chosen by the audience, read more about the how and why in this interview with festival director Michael Maul by blogger Rick Fulkner) with two concerts each by Herreweghe, Lutz, Koopman, Gardiner, Rademann, and Vox Luminis. Here are my tips to get organized:

If you already know you want to attend all 12 cantata concerts (= two concerts per day, six days in a row, of two to three cantatas each, each cantata preceded by a motet by Schütz or Schein), you can purchase your “packet” here. You’ll go through two seat selection screens, one to select your seat for the Thomaskirche (the screen doesn’t specify this, but it is the seatmap that has the stage at the bottom, and “Südempore” on the right), and, once you have clicked the checkout button, another one for the Nikolaikirche (not specified either, but this is the map that has the stage at the top and 1. Empore and 2. Empore).

Please note for Thomaskirche:

  • For concerts with choir and orchestra, the performers are located on the organ loft of the Sauer-organ (the bottom of the seating map).
  • The majority of the pews downstairs, where the sound is likely best, have their backs to the performers. Many people don’t mind this, but it surprised me. Thus, if it is important for you to see the performers, choose a premium seat (yellow on the map) on one of the balconies, where the sound is wonderful too.
  • Some seats on the Empore (balconies) have partially blocked views of the performers due to large pillars, even the premium seats are not all equal, so don’t get your hopes up too much.

Please note for Nikolaikirche:

The sound is good everywhere in the church, but most seats on the balconies have limited leg space, so keep that in mind if you are tall, since these cantata concerts will be pretty long. The Bach Museum shop sells cute portable cushions for making your church pew seat more comfortable, see picture on the left, pillow folded in half. I also saw people who traveled with inflatable pillows.

If you want to pick and choose, only want to go to one concert per day, or don’t want to commit to spending a thousand euros just yet, mark your calendar:

  • November 11, 2025: Advance sales start for Patrons of the Bachfest/Bach-Archiv Leipzig and for members of the Neue Bachgesellschaft.
    • Become a patron of the Bachfest here (access to VIP seating for three concerts or more, depending on level of giving).
    • Become a member of the Neue Bachgesellschaft here (no special seating, just the earlier access to ticket sales).
  • November 25, 2025: Regular ticket sales start.

Where to stay: People I met had good experiences at Innside (hotel directly across the ring from the Thomaskirche, in a nice neighborhood), Motel One (close to the Nikolaikirche), and Adina Apartment Hotel (apartments close to the Nikolaikirche, 24-hour reception, pool, restaurant, bar). I myself stayed in Apartmenthotel Quartier M. which I loved because of the excellent organic supermarket on the ground floor of the same building, the good price, and the short walking distance to the Thomaskirche.

Copyright Wieneke Gorter, July 9, 2025.

Bachfest Leipzig 2024 – Friday June 7

11 Tuesday Jun 2024

Posted by cantatasonmymind in Cantatas

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Bach, Bachfest Leipzig, benedikt-kristjansson, chorale-cantatas, johann-sebastian-bach, lydia-vroegindeweij, Michael Maul

This is the first post in a longer series about my experience at the Bachfest Leipzig 2024. I was there for only four days, and wished I could have stayed longer and could have traveled more in the region, but it was enough to get a taste of the wonderful atmosphere, the camaraderie, and to hear some fabulous concerts in Leipzig and Freiberg. Find the program for Bachfest Leipzig 2025 here.

I’m really here!

On Friday, June 7, I took a crazy early train from Amsterdam and arrived at the Leipzig main station (Hauptbahnhof) in the early afternoon. Both at the station and on the short walk to my apartment I saw enormous Bachfest posters, see the pictures above (left photo at the station, right photo at the Evangelisch Reformierte Kirche, which is one of the concert venues). No doubt about it: I was really here!

Participating in a Flash Mob

View from the rehearsal room

At 3:15 pm I made my way to a pretty rehearsal room around the corner of the St. Thomas church (Thomaskirche), to rehearse for the not-so-secret-anymore Flash Mob. The festival’s artistic director Michael Maul had announced the Flash Mob on Facebook and picked a good time and place for it: right before the festival’s official opening concert, on St. Thomas Square. To give you an idea of how busy it was: the cafe we sat down at afterwards asked us to move or wait 10 minutes, because they had run out of glasses.

We sang the two chorales from Cantata 147 Herz und Mund und Tat und Leben: “Wohl mir, dass ich Jesum habe” and the famous “Jesus bleibet meine Freude.” To get an idea of what that sounded like, watch this video by the Bachfest on Facebook, with many thanks to David Chin for filming and creating the video.

I had met up with my friend Lydia Vroegindeweij. Thanks to her groundbreaking research into chorale cantatas and her and Ellen van der Sar’s all-encompassing Luther300-Bach500 project, Michael Maul now calls her “Die Choralkantatenexpertin” (the chorale cantata expert) when he introduces her to a fellow Bach scholar, and rightfully so. We had fun participating in the Flash Mob, and met three lovely women from a local a capella choir. Afterwards (while the opening concert was taking place in the church) the others enjoyed a “Bach Kaffee” (yes that is a German thing, to drink coffee late in the afternoon), while I ate an early dinner.

Lydia Vroegindeweij (middle) and our fellow choir members
on St. Thomas Square (me on the right)

Singing along with chorales

The theme of this year’s Bachfest is Chorale Cantatas, and in 16 concerts over the course of one week, all of Bach’s chorale cantatas* will get performed during this festival. I only attended the first one of these, on the evening of Friday, June 7, in the beautiful St. Nicholas church (Nikolaikirche), which has great acoustics.

Carus’ special festival edition

To make the audience fully aware of the chorale on which Bach based his cantata, the festival came up with a formula for each of these cantata concerts. For each cantata on the program, the formula is as follows:

  1. The church’s organist plays an organ prelude (by Bach if he wrote one) on the chorale melody
  2. The audience sings the first two stanzas of the chorale. To aid with this, the festival and Carus Verlag created a free edition of all the chorales (you can download it too, just click on the link!)
  3. After the closing chorale of each cantata (sung by the ensemble performing the concert), the audience also gets to sing that closing chorale.

I very much appreciated this for this first concert, and I happened to sit next to a friend who is also an avid choral singer, so we enjoyed it. However it made for an extremely long concert, and I felt a bit for the people who had bought tickets to *all* chorale cantata concerts, as I couldn’t really see myself doing this seven days in a row, sometimes three times a day.

Benedikt Kristjánsson

Benedikt Kristjánsson, photo by Angela Árnadóttir

The tenor soloist you see and hear singing first in the Flash Mob video is Benedikt Kristjánsson, whom Bach fans still know best for singing an entire St. John Passion by himself during the pandemic.

Kristjánsson was my hero of this first festival day, yes a bit because of the Flash Mob, but mainly thanks to his singing in this first chorale cantata concert.

For me, his aria “Des Vaters Stimme ließ sich hören” from Cantata 7 Christ unser Herr zum Jordan kam, which also features two gorgeous flute parts, was the absolute highlight of that concert.

Full Nikolaikirche for the first chorale cantata concert
Nikolaikirche after the concert

After this concert it was time for bed for me, because I would have to get up at 6:30 the next morning. More about that in the next episode.

Thank you for reading! Please feel free to share with anyone you think might like to read this too.

Wieneke Gorter, June 11, 2024, updated November 29, 2024.

*Bach’s chorale cantatas = the cantatas he wrote during his second year in Leipzig, from June 1724 to March 1725. For nine and a half months, including the entire Christmas season, Bach would write every cantata according to this same template: the opening movement is a chorale fantasia on the first stanza of an existing Lutheran hymn or chorale, with the tune appearing as a cantus firmus. The last movement has the last stanza of the same hymn as text, in a four-part harmonization of the tune. The text of those choral, outer movements was used verbatim, while the text of the solo, inner movements was paraphrased, but still based on the inner stanzas of the same hymn.

Bach’s Gratitude Cantatas

28 Sunday Jan 2024

Posted by cantatasonmymind in Cantatas, Leipzig, Septuagesima

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Bach, BWV 144, BWV 84, Capricornus Consort Basel, johann-sebastian-bach, Katharina Arfken, Maria Keohane, Martin Stadler, Miriam Feuersinger

The Parable of the Laborers in the Vineyard by Rembrandt van Rijn. 1637. Oil on panel. The Hermitage, St. Petersburg, Russia.

An idea for this blog post was still sitting in my drafts folder. It’s a party in that drafts folder, so many blog posts in various stages of readiness are hanging out there! Self-imposed deadlines and self-imposed standards often lead me to decide that the post won’t be finished in time for the appropriate Sunday and that it is thus better to shelve it.

In 2020 I jotted down that it would be good to talk about gratitude in connection with Bach’s Cantata 144 Nimm was dein ist, und gehe hin! (1724) and Cantata 84 Ich bin vergnügt mit meinem Glücke (1727) for this Sunday Septuagesima, or the Third Sunday before Lent. I’m not alone in associating these cantatas with a gratitude practice. Prominent Bach scholar Michael Maul calls the soprano aria “Genügsamkeit” (Contentment) from Cantata 144 “the Buddha aria” in his Podcast about this cantata (in German).

It seems appropriate to take the draft post off the shelf today, because at the start of this weekend I went to see Wim Wenders’ movie Perfect Days. The movie celebrates living a simple life and being open to small wonders and pleasures. I loved it and it calmed me down. And it is an excellent opportunity to finally share Miriam Feuersinger’s 2022 solo album “Ich bin vergnügt …” on this blog.

For the background stories about cantatas 144 and 84, please (re)read my post from 2017.

Before I discuss Feuersinger’s recording, I should not forget to mention that the Netherlands Bach Society’s live recording of Cantata 84 was also published in 2022 and features excellent music-making by soprano Maria Keohane and oboist Martin Stadler. I love the many colors of Maria Keohane’s voice and I enjoy watching her sing because she is so obviously enjoying herself, and her singing always seems effortless.

The award-winning Solo Cantata album by Miriam Feuersinger and Capricornus Consort Basel includes a beautiful rendition of Cantata 84. Find it here on Spotify and here on YouTube. I adore Feuersinger’s clear voice and Katharina Arfken’s oboe playing. I also appreciate their decision to have the strings play the alto, tenor, and bass part in the final chorale. It is too bad there is no video recording of this, because watching Miriam Feuersinger’s energy on stage is fantastic, and enormously inspiring to me.* I have never attended a live performance of hers yet, but I am hoping to fix that on February 17 in Stuttgart and/or on April 7 in Arnstadt. And to circle back to gratitude practice, she is also an inspiring promotor of celebrating the beauty in everyday life, from quoting Albert Einstein on her concert calendar page “You can live life in two ways: As if there are no miracles at all, or as if everything you encounter is a miracle,” to her instagram account.

Wieneke Gorter, January 28, 2024.

*watch for example her performing the opening aria of Cantata 32 with the J.S. Bach Foundation here on YouTube.

About Weekly Cantata

I am a bilingual writer, publicist, choral singer, art and nature lover, foodie, happy wife, and blessed mother of two. I started this blog in 2016, inspired by my late mother’s love for Bach’s cantatas. After 23 years in the San Francisco Bay Area, I’m now back in the Netherlands.

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