Vints, there simply isn't room for a THIRD Tafelmusik - but as ever, you are so persuasive...
Georg Philipp Telemann: 19 – 23 June
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... and of course you will also want the various (excellent) Telemann CDs with Collegium Musicum 90 and Simon Standage on the chandos / chaconne labels. Had he only composed the Concerto for two chalumeaux in d minor TWV 52:d1 ( superb performance by Colin Lawson and Michael Harris) Telemann wd still have been a composer worth taking seriously -
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostExcellent Collection piece by David Vickers in Gramophone this month on the Telemann Musique de Table/Tafelmusik...
Recommendations:
Historic Innovation:
Schola Cantorum Basiliensis/Wenzinger (Decca Eloquence 1964/5)
Dazzling Musicianship:
Musica Antiqua Köln/Goebel (Archiv 1988)
Abundant Illumination:
CMW/Harnoncourt (Teldec/Warners 1986/8)
But the Top Choice was the recent:
Freiburg Baroque O./Petra Müllejans, von der Goltz (HM 2009)Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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I've just been listening again to the Freiburg recording of Tafelmusik. I do think it's worth having, although it really doesn't have the attention to detail that characterises both Harnoncourt and Goebel, both of whom of course must have have played more Telemann than almost anyone else living. The playing is very fine, but for me it doesn't have that sense of making the music new - it's a beautifully presented example of the contemporary state of Baroque performance, whereas with the other two you have a sense of "what if we do it like this?" Some years ago I was talking to someone who had played on both Harnoncourt and Goebel recordings (the Australian horn player Andrew Joy), who said he very much enjoyed participating in both but that for him Goebel had the edge in terms of excitement and imagination. I would go along with that. There's nothing about the Freiburg recording that makes me think anything but "this music is very fine indeed". Which of course is exactly what many people want!
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Yesterday evening I had the choice either to go and see a friend playing in a programme of chamber music by Telemann or to go and see another friend playing in a programme of chamber music by Villa-Lobos. I chose the latter on account of this composer's music being unfamiliar to me and wanting not to stick to what I know. I wish I hadn't.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostYesterday evening I had the choice either to go and see a friend playing in a programme of chamber music by Telemann or to go and see another friend playing in a programme of chamber music by Villa-Lobos. I chose the latter on account of this composer's music being unfamiliar to me and wanting not to stick to what I know. I wish I hadn't.
The only V-L chamber music I know is the Nonet with wordless chorus, which IMV is 'interesting without being memorable'.
As for Telemann, I have played several of his wind quintets for 2 oboes, 2 horns and bassoon, which are absolutely delightful.
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Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 22-06-17, 15:35.
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Originally posted by Tony View PostDon't you like Villa-Lobos as a result of that chamber music concert?
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostEven all those years ago, I simply couldn't choose between the versions of Tafelmusik by Goebel and Harnoncourt, so I bought them both, at great expense! But they are indispensable in their own ways. Haven't heard the newer Freiburgers....
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostLooking forward to this arriving tomorrow
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The MAK set arrived today. Similar sort of packaging to the Soft Machine set I got a year or so ago. Outer slip case below Membran standard, though the individual card envelopes are somewhat better than plain paper and film versions. Note the irony of the name of the credited designer of the set, Sven Grot. O.K., so the pronunciation of the family name is not actually homophonic, but ...
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Wednesday 28 Radio 3 in Concert
A treat is in store.
Wednesday 28 Radio 3 in Concert
Florilegium present a Telemann 250th Anniversary Concert.
Recorded at Wigmore Hall, London
Telemann:
Ouverture (Tafelmusik Suite in E minor, TWV55:e1)
Fantaisie for flute No. 9 in E major, TWV40:10
Cantata: Ihr Völker hört, TWV1:921
8.15: Interval
8.35
'Paris' Quartet in E minor, TWV43:e4
Trio Sonata in A major, TWV42:a5
Sonata in A major, TWV41:A6
Conclusion in E minor, TWV50:5 (Tafelmusik)
Clare Wilkinson, mezzo-soprano
Florilegium
Ashley Solomon, director
Florilegium showcases the exceptional variety of Telemann's compositions, from an intimate solo fantasie to the extraordinary collections of chamber music from his Tafelmusik, Essercizii Musici and Paris Quartets. Mezzo-soprano Clare Wilkinson joins Florilegium in one of the virtuosic cantatas from his Harmonischer Gottesdienst cycle of 1725-6.
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