CARL STAMITZ: who will record his cello concertos??

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  • cocolinmichela
    • Nov 2024

    CARL STAMITZ: who will record his cello concertos??

    I am a great fan of this so underrated composer, contemporary of Mozart and to him well known (as Mozart's letters to his father show) his cello concertos 1-3 are enough for me to rank him amongst my top 10 composers of all time!!
    I am proud to own a Naxos recording with cellist Christian Benda, but why, oh, why do other cellists so rarely perform the concertos?
    Any cellist out there that would consider recording them?


    Here's a link to of his Concerto n 1, 2nd movement.

    Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
  • Richard Tarleton

    #2
    Thanks for the tip, and the link!

    I seem to have quite a few Naxos cello concerto recordings, but these are new to me. Maria Kliegel is one of the Naxos house cellists that I particularly admire (Shostakovich, Haydn, Dvorak) but I also have a pile of Vivaldis with R Wallfisch

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    • Dave2002
      Full Member
      • Dec 2010
      • 18021

      #3
      Originally posted by cocolinmichela View Post
      I am a great fan of this so underrated composer, contemporary of Mozart and to him well known (as Mozart's letters to his father show) his cello concertos 1-3 are enough for me to rank him amongst my top 10 composers of all time!!
      I am proud to own a Naxos recording with cellist Christian Benda, but why, oh, why do other cellists so rarely perform the concertos?
      Any cellist out there that would consider recording them?


      Here's a link to of his Concerto n 1, 2nd movement.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=irsDrwoa4Xw
      Your avatar suggests that you might yourself play them.

      Comment

      • cocolinmichela

        #4
        Originally posted by Dave2002 View Post
        Your avatar suggests that you might yourself play them.
        Ha, well, I play the 1st concerto (2nd movement) but I am NOWHERE NEAR the level required to record them!! Can't afford to pay the orchestra either!

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        • cocolinmichela

          #5
          Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post
          Thanks for the tip, and the link!

          I seem to have quite a few Naxos cello concerto recordings, but these are new to me. Maria Kliegel is one of the Naxos house cellists that I particularly admire (Shostakovich, Haydn, Dvorak) but I also have a pile of Vivaldis with R Wallfisch
          Ah, you mentioned Naxos recordings...I have quite a few of them, too, all pretty good for a budget label. If you like cello works other than concertos, there is a wonderful Naxos recording coming out on the 30th September with Julian Lloyd Webber and his wife Jiaxin called "A Tale of Two Cellos", music from Monteverdi to Part, quite a few gems there (Piazzolla and Hahn to mention a few) and at a ridiculous price! If a renowned artist with more than 40 years in the music industry like Julian chose to record for Naxos it has to be a good label!

          Buy A Tale Of Two Cellos by Julian:Jiaxin Lloyd Webber from Amazon's Classical Music Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders.

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          • aka Calum Da Jazbo
            Late member
            • Nov 2010
            • 9173

            #6
            thank you for arousing my curiosity; i found this an mp3 from Supraphon; and this the commentary in that last link is rather dismissive of bread and butter Mannheim school music and then goes on to give a mouth watering descritptionof the Cello Concerto in G Maj! Just like the characterisation as baroque wallpaper of the music of Telemann or Vivaldi!
            According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.

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            • cocolinmichela

              #7
              Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View Post
              thank you for arousing my curiosity; i found this an mp3 from Supraphon; and this the commentary in that last link is rather dismissive of bread and butter Mannheim school music and then goes on to give a mouth watering descritptionof the Cello Concerto in G Maj! Just like the characterisation as baroque wallpaper of the music of Telemann or Vivaldi!
              Oh, so much more than wallpaper, not Baroque either, more classical to my ears. The Stamitz cello concertos are, to me, what Mozart did not compose for solo cello.

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              • aka Calum Da Jazbo
                Late member
                • Nov 2010
                • 9173

                #8
                indeed .... i intended to convey my view that dismissing the works of such baroque masters as wallpaper was a crime, just as the rather aloof comments on AM about Stamitz were also very unhelpful ... i look forward to listening to them when my emusic monthly fix comes around again!
                According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.

                Comment

                • Roehre

                  #9
                  Originally posted by cocolinmichela View Post
                  Oh, so much more than wallpaper, not Baroque either, more classical to my ears. The Stamitz cello concertos are, to me, what Mozart did not compose for solo cello.
                  I only know his 2nd concerto (in A) quite well, and likely dating from the mid 1780s it's got certainly classical contours, comparable with the Haydn and Mozart concertos.

                  As far as Mozart is concerned: there are some examples how a mozartian cello concerto might have sounded:

                  -there is a fragment -a nearly complete slow-movement that is- of a cello sonata: KV374g/App.46 from 1783.
                  -an unfinished Sinfonia concertante for violin, viola and cello in A KV320e/App.104 from 1779, of which the 1st mvt has been sketched (and as Mozart used to do: main parts orchestrated in an orchestral score) upto the re-exposition.

                  Both fragments are easiliy made playable and executable, and that has happened: Eric Smith (1989) for the former and Schumacher/Bianchi (1975) for the latter.

                  Btw: for a Beethovenian example, apart from the Triple concerto: the cello-solo in Die Geschöpfe des Prometheus op.43.

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