Authentic Classical Concerts

Authentic Classical Concerts by Josef-Stefan Kindler & Andreas Otto Grimminger, K&K Verlagsanstalt
A release series of audiophile concert recordings, recorded, produced and created by Josef-Stefan Kindler and Andreas Otto Grimminger.
Copyright by K&K Verlagsanstalt, www.kuk-art.com

Authentic Classical Concerts by Josef-Stefan Kindler & Andreas Otto Grimminger, K&K VerlagsanstaltPublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording for posterity outstanding performances and concerts. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

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Three Wise Men · The Gershwin Years

Album Cover
EUR 22,00
CD
Three Wise Men
The Gershwin Years

A concert with music by George Gershwin, arranged and performed by
Frank Roberscheuten (NL) · Clarinet & Saxophone
Rossano Sportiello (IT) · Piano
Martin Breinschmid (AT) · Drums & Vibraphone

A concert recording from Bad Homburg Castle in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: c. 63 Minutes
CD & Digital Music Album

Previews

Performer(s)

I

n the past ten years the Three Wise Men have established themselves as Europe's premier classical jazz trio. Founded by Dutch saxophonist Frank Roberscheuten in 2007 the band has toured Europe and proved it's outstanding format in over 700 concerts. Roberscheuten is considered one of the leading European saxophonists. His playing represents a colorful variety of influences ranging from New Orleans to Bebop based on the styles of Jazz giants like Coleman Hawkins,Johnny Hodges and Stan Getz. Italian pianist Rossano Sportiello is considered the heart of the Trio. After classical piano studies in Milano he established himself in the jazz center of the world New York City. His playing covers a stunning variety of styles mixing classical with Stride piano and Bebop. Bebop legend Barry Harrys: "Rossano is simply the best stride piano player in the world" and the New York Times quote: "Sportiello is the best Italian import since the Barolo". Viennese Drummer/Percussionist Martin Breinschmid supplies the rhythmic foundation for the Wise Men. His passion for virtuoso swing drumming à la Gene Krupa, vibraphone à la Lionel Hampton and his use of unusual percussion objects make him a unique personality in the jazz field.
Leading jazz critics have stated that the uniting element in the Three Wise Men is their love for swinging music that has lead to an almost telepathic understanding between the three musicians.
A concert by the Three Wise Men is a most entertaining journey through the world of classical jazz filled with fire, virtuosity, emotion and humor.
That's why it's a "must" not only for jazz lovers but for all people who appreciate good music.

The Three Wise Men

Rossano Sportiello (IT) · Piano ~ Frank Roberscheuten (NL) · Reeds ~ Martin Breinschmid (AT) · Drums & Vibraphone

"Without being ensnared in "recreating" jazz's past, 'The Wise Men' lift our spirits, expressing their individuality while honoring the traditions of the music. They have their own joyous songs to share with us. Playing in a trio offers no place to hide; if the telepathy necessary for jazz breaks down for a second, everyone hears it. But these three musicians don't have this problem. It is as if they laugh at the same inside jokes; they know the nuances of their common language deeply and well. Each 'Wise Men' is a brilliant soloist in a wide variety of genres, but each one is more generous than narcissistic. The trio is a band - a jazz democracy where everyone pays attention and works for the benefit of the group. You'll hear them listening to each other's efforts in friendly dialogue. Their creativity is also evident in the trio's repertoire and their varied approaches to the music."
Michael Steinman

"All in all, 'Thee Wise Men' is a pretty accurate name for these three cats. Although Frank grew up in Holland, Martin in Austria and Rossano in Italy, each was wise enough, and talented enough, to have learned the American language of jazz, which they 'speak' fluently and beautifully. As a team, they are also wise enough to know how to present that music, that is, with class and conviction, dedication and love. Those essential elements are present in their live performances and recordings."
Dan Barrett

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Works, Movements & Tracklist

1. I Got Rhythm [4:40]

2. But Not For Me [4:57]

3. Fascinating Rhythm [3:55]

4. I Loves You, Porgy [6:04]

5. Love Is Here To Stay [6:51]

6. Embraceable You [5:39]

7. Oh, Lady Be Good [4:55]

8. How Long Has This Been Going On? [5:58]

9. Liza (All The Clouds‘ll Roll Away) [4:10]

10. I've Got A Crush On You [3:11]

11. Swanee [5:05]

12. Strike Up The Band [7:26]

Music by George & Ira Gershwin
Arrangements by Frank Roberscheuten


A concert recording from Bad Homburg Castle in Germany,
created by Josef-Stefan Kindler, Andreas Otto Grimminger & Volker Northoff

Concert Date: March 12th, 2023

Sound Engineer: Andreas Otto Grimminger

Mastering: Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler

Photography, Artwork & Coverdesign: Josef-Stefan Kindler

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Strauss: Sonatina No. 1 in F Major "From the Workshop of an Invalid"

Album Cover
EUR 9,90
Richard Strauss (1864-1949):
Sonatina No. 1

in F Major for 16 Wind Instruments, TrV 288
"From the Workshop of an Invalid"

Performed by the Thaous Ensemble

A live recording from Bad Homburg Castle in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · c. 32 Minutes
Digital Music Album · 3 Tracks

FILES
Previews

Performer(s)
Thaous Ensemble

T

he 18th century saw the composition of numerous pieces for wind instrument octets. In the Classical era, what was then known as "Harmoniemusik" was composed especially for them. The Thaous Ensemble ('thaous' is Egyptian for peacock) has dedicated itself to this tradition. The ensemble is a wind octet in the truly classic sense, with two pairs of oboes, clarinets, bassoons and horns, and some of the musicians have been playing together since their early youth. They were either members of Baden-Württenberg's Young Chamber Philharmonic Orchestra or they got to know each other when they were students. In the meantime, they are all soloists in prestigious orchestras, or professors and lecturers at various cultural institutions at home or abroad - the Frankfurt or the Würzburg Universities of Music and Performing Arts, for instance. Or the Hamburg State Opera, the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Zurich Opera House or the Deutsche Sinfonieorchester Berlin. Every single member of the Ensemble has won important prizes at national and international competitions. Some of them have held scholarships from the German President or from the German "Studienstiftung" and work regularly with top ensembles like the "Ensemble Modern". But more than anything else, the hallmark of the Thaous Ensemble is adaptability, because - depending on what is called for - the regular musicians in this classic wind octet will open their ranks to include soloists from elsewhere - from Hesse Public Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Gewandhaus Orchestra in Leipzig, the Frankfurt Opera and the Deutsche Oper Berlin.

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Digital Music Albums:

Online-Musik-Alben:

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Romantic Piano · Vol. 1

Album Cover
EUR 9,90
Compilation
Romantic Piano · Vol. 1

Live recordings featuring works for Piano and for Piano with Orchestra
by Mozart, Tchaikovsky, Bach, Chopin, Brahms, Schubert & Schumann

HD Recordings · DDD · Duration: c. 58 Minutes
11 Tracks incl. Digital Booklet


FILES
Previews

Work(s) & Performance
Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 21

The Piano Concerto No. 21 in C Major, K. 467 "Elvira Madigan", by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)

The Piano Concerto No. 21 in C major, K. 467, was completed on 9 March 1785 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, four weeks after the completion of the previous D minor concerto, K. 466. The concerto has three movements. The famous Andante, in the subdominant key of F major, is in three parts. The opening section is for orchestra only and features muted strings. The first violins play with a dreamlike melody over an accompaniment consisting of second violins and violas playing repeated-note triplets and the cellos and bass playing pizzicato arpeggios. All of the main melodic material of the movement is contained in this orchestral introduction, in either F major or F minor. The second section introduces the solo piano and starts off in F major. It is not a literal repeat, though, as after the first few phrases, new material is interjected which ventures off into different keys. When familiar material returns, the music is now in the dominant keys of C minor and C major. Then it modulates to G minor, then B-flat major, then F minor, which transitions to the third section of the movement. The third section begins with the dreamlike melody again, but this time in the relative key of F major's parallel key, A-flat major. Over the course of this final section, the music makes its way back to the tonic keys of F minor and then F major and a short coda concludes the movement. The second movement was featured in the 1967 Swedish film "Elvira Madigan". As a result, the piece has become widely known as the "Elvira Madigan concerto". Also Neil Diamond's song "Song Sung Blue" (1972) bases on a theme from the andante movement. (From Wikipedia, the Free Encyklopedia)

Tchaikovsky: 6 Pieces for Piano

Six Pieces for Piano, Op. 19, by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893)

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky is considered as the most important Russian composer of the 19th century. The Six Pieces for Piano, Op. 19, were composed in 1873.

Bach: French Suite No. 5

The French Suite No. 5 in G Major, BWV 816, by Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)

The French Suites, BWV 812-817, are six suites which Johann Sebastian Bach wrote for the clavier (harpsichord or clavichord) between the years of 1722 and 1725. Although Suites Nos. 1 to 4 are typically dated to 1722, it is possible that the first was written somewhat earlier. The suites were later given the name "French" (first recorded usage by Friedrich Wilhelm Marpurg in 1762). Likewise, the English Suites received a later appellation. The name was popularised by Bach's biographer Johann Nikolaus Forkel, who wrote in his 1802 biography of Bach, "One usually calls them French Suites because they are written in the French manner." This claim, however, is inaccurate: like Bach's other suites, they follow a largely Italian convention. There is no surviving definitive manuscript of these suites, and ornamentation varies both in type and in degree across manuscripts. The courantes of the first (in D minor) and third (in B minor) suites are in the French style, the courantes of the other four suites are all in the Italian style. In any case, Bach also employed dance movements (such as the polonaise of the sixth suite) that are foreign to the French manner. Usually, the swift second movement after the allemande is named either courante (French style) or corrente (Italian style), but in all these suites the second movements are named courante, according to the Bach catalog listing, which supports the suggestion that these suites are "French". Some of the manuscripts that have come down to us are titled "Suites Pour Le Clavecin", which is what probably led to the tradition of calling them "French" Suites. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 20

The Piano Concerto No. 20 in D Minor, K. 466, by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)

The Piano Concerto No. 20 in D minor, K. 466, was composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1785. The first performance took place at the Mehlgrube Casino in Vienna on 11 February 1785, with the composer as the soloist. A few days after the first performance, the composer's father, Leopold, visiting in Vienna, wrote to his daughter Nannerl about her brother's recent success: "[I heard] an excellent new piano concerto by Wolfgang, on which the copyist was still at work when we got here, and your brother didn't even have time to play through the rondo because he had to oversee the copying operation." It is written in the key of D minor. Other works by the composer in that key include the Fantasia K. 397 for piano, the Requiem, a Kyrie, a mass, the aria "Der Hölle Rache kocht in meinem Herzen" from the opera "The Magic Flute" and parts of the opera "Don Giovanni". It is the first of two piano concertos written in a minor key (No. 24 in C minor being the other). The young Ludwig van Beethoven admired this concerto and kept it in his repertoire. Composers who wrote cadenzas for it include Beethoven (WoO 58), Charles-Valentin Alkan, Johannes Brahms (WoO 14), Johann Nepomuk Hummel, Ferruccio Busoni, and Clara Schumann. One of Mozart's favorite pianos that he played while he was living in Vienna had a pedal-board that was operated with the feet, like that of an organ. This piano that Mozart owned is on display at Mozart House in Salzburg, but currently it has no pedal-board. The fact that Mozart had a piano with a pedal-board is reported in a letter written by his father, Leopold, who visited his son while he lived in Vienna. Among Mozart's piano works, none are explicitly written with a part for a pedal-board. However, according to Leopold's report, at the first performance of Piano Concerto No. 20 in D Minor (K. 466), Mozart, who was the soloist and conductor, used his own piano, equipped with a pedal-board. Presumably the pedal-board was used to reinforce the left-hand part, or add lower notes than the standard keyboard could play. Because Mozart was also an expert on the organ, operating a pedal-board with his feet was no harder than using only his hands. The concerto is scored for solo piano, flute, two oboes, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, timpani and strings. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Bach: Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring

"Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring" by Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)

"Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring" (or simply "Joy") is the most common English title of a piece of music derived from a chorale setting of the cantata "Herz und Mund und Tat und Leben, BWV 147" ("Heart and Mouth and Deed and Life"), composed by Johann Sebastian Bach in 1723. The same music on different stanzas of a chorale closes both parts of the cantata. A transcription by the English pianist Myra Hess (1890–1965) was published in 1926 for piano solo and in 1934 for piano duet.[1] It is often performed slowly and reverently at wedding ceremonies, as well as during Christian festive seasons like Christmas and Easter. Bach composed a four-part setting with independent orchestral accompaniment of two stanzas of the hymn "Jesu, meiner Seelen Wonne", written by Martin Janus in 1661, which was sung to a melody by the violinist and composer Johann Schop, "Werde munter, mein Gemüthe". The movements conclude the two parts of the cantata. Bach scored the chorale movements (6 and 10) from "Herz und Mund und Tat und Leben" for choir, trumpet, violin, optionally oboe, viola, and basso continuo. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Chopin: Piano Concerto No. 1

The Piano Concerto No. 1 in E Minor, Op. 11, by Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849)

Chopin loves singing and as a singing poet of the piano, he inveigles into the universe of dreams. Chopin composed the piano concerto in e minor at the age of 20 during spring/summer of 1830 in Warsaw. It emerged shortly after his concerto in f minor and belongs to the standard repertoire of concert literature. In fall 1830, Chopin left Warsaw to go to Paris. This work is based mainly on polish dancing rhythms; especially prominent is the krakowiak in the last movement. Eventually, his work is characterized by its exceptional cantability. Chopin writes opera for the piano. He most likely performed this concerto himself in Warsaw in the same string casting it can be heard here. (Franz Vorraber)

Brahms: 8 Pieces for Piano

8 Pieces for Piano, Op. 76, by Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)

The 8 Piano Pieces op. 76 by Johannes Brahms comprise four Capriccios and Intermezzi each. With this collection of character pieces, published in February 1879, Brahms came forward again after a long time with a work for solo piano, which was premiered by Hans von Bülow in Berlin on October 29, 1879. While he had already composed the first Capriccio in 1871, he wrote the remaining pieces in 1878 in Pörtschach on Lake Wörth. The collection, originally divided into two booklets, shows the influence of Robert Schumann and Frédéric Chopin, whose complete editions published by Breitkopf & Härtel Brahms supervised at this time. In condensed form, the mostly three-part pieces already point to the internalized late style of Opera 116 to 119, whose characteristics include the multi-layered piano movement, chromaticism, and rhythmic refinements. The piano pieces appeared only after Brahms had not written any independent solo piano works for an extended period. After the Paganini Variations published in 1866, the Waltzes for piano four hands op. 39, which he held in high esteem, and the first part of the Hungarian Dances, initially also written for four hands, there was a long pause in publication in this field, which ended only in 1879. For Andrea Bonatta this shows how difficult it was for Brahms to find new expressive possibilities after the pianistic explorations of the virtuoso Handel and Paganini Variations. For the pianist, chamber musician and gifted sight-reading player, this phase did not mean that he would have completely abandoned the piano. In addition to the Waltzes and Hungarian Dances, he wrote the Sonata for Piano and Violoncello op 38, the Liebeslieder Waltzes op 52, the version for two pianos of his Haydn Variations op 56b, the Piano Quartet No. 3 in C minor op 60 and the Neue Liebeslieder op 65 during this period. In 1878, he also began to work on his symphonic Second Piano Concerto in B flat major; the piano thus played an important role in chamber and later concertante music. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator)

Chopin: 3 Mazurkas, Op. 50

The 3 Mazurkas, Op. 50, by Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849)

Chopin's "Mazurkas" - he wrote at least 69 Mazurkas - are based on a traditional Polish folk dance in triple meter with an accent on the third or on the second beat, called "Mazurek". Chopin started composing his mazurkas in 1825, and continued composing them until 1849, the year of his death.

Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 16 in D Major

The Piano Concerto No. 16 in D Major, K. 451, by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)

The Piano Concerto No. 16 in D major, K. 451, is a concertante work for piano, or pianoforte, and orchestra by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Mozart composed the concerto for performance at a series of concerts at the Vienna venues of the Trattnerhof and the Burgtheater in the first quarter of 1784, where he was himself the soloist. Mozart noted this concerto as complete on 22 March 1784 in his catalog, and performed the work later that month. Cliff Eisen has postulated that this performance was on 31 March 1784. The work is orchestrated for solo piano, flute, two oboes, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, timpani and strings. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Schubert: Piano Sonata No. 14

The Piano Sonata No. 14 in A Minor by Franz Schubert (1797-1828)

Franz Schubert's Piano Sonata in A minor, D 784 (posthumously published as Op. 143), is one of Schubert's major compositions for the piano. Schubert composed the work in February 1823, perhaps as a response to his illness the year before. It was however not published until 1839, eleven years after his death. It was given the opus number 143 and a dedication to Felix Mendelssohn by its publishers. The D 784 sonata, Schubert's last to be in three movements, is seen by many to herald a new era in Schubert's output for the piano, and to be a profound and sometimes almost obsessively tragic work. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Schumann: Piano Sonata No. 2

The Piano Sonata No. 2 in G Minor, Op. 22, by Robert Schumann (1810-1856)

The Piano Sonata No. 2 in G minor, Op. 22 was composed by Robert Schumann from 1830 to 1838. It was his last full-length attempt at the sonata genre, the other completed ones being the Piano Sonata No. 1 in F sharp minor (Op. 11) and the Piano Sonata No. 3 in F minor (Op. 14); he later wrote Three Piano Sonatas for the Young Op. 118. Because it was published before the F minor sonata, it was given an earlier sequence number (No. 2) but still kept its later opus number (Op. 22). This has caused confusion, and recordings of the G minor Sonata have sometimes been published as "Sonata No. 3". There was also an earlier sonata in F minor, which Schumann abandoned; this is sometimes referred to as "Sonata No. 4". Among his sonatas, this one is very frequently performed and recorded. Because of its great variety and highly virtuosic demands, it is enjoyed both by audiences and performers alike. Clara Schumann claimed to be "endlessly looking forward to the second sonata", but nevertheless Robert revised it several times. At Clara Schumann's request, the original finale, marked Presto passionato was replaced with a less difficult movement in 1838. The Andantino of the sonata is based on Schumann's early song "Im Herbste"; Jensen describes the first movement as having "a concern with motivic structure". It is dedicated to Schumann's friend the pianist Henriette Voigt and was published in September 1839. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

The concert grand piano is incontestably the king of instruments. We could now wax lyrical about its incomparable dynamics and go into its ability to go from the tenderest of sounds in a soft minor key to the magnificent power of a fortissimo, or I could rhapsodise about its impressive size and elegance. But what makes this instrument really fascinating is its individuality, since each one is unique in itself - created by a master. A concert grand has a life all of its own that a virtuoso can really "get into" and hence bring the work of the composer to life. In our Grand Piano Masters Series, we get into the character and soul of the concert grand piano and experience, during the performance itself, the dialogue between the instrument, the virtuoso and the performance space.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Works, Movements & Tracklist

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
Piano Concerto No. 21 in C Major, K. 467 "Elvira Madigan"
1. II. Andante (6:02)
Performed by Christoph Soldan (Piano)
and the Silesian Chamber Orchestra,
conducted by Pawel Przytocki

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893):
6 Pieces for Piano, Op. 19
2. No. 4: Nocturne (3:47)
Performed by Severin von Eckardstein (Piano)

Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750):
French Suite No. 5 in G Major, BWV 816
3. III. Sarabande (3:25)
Performed by Magdalena Müllerperth (Piano)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
Piano Concerto No. 20 in D Minor, K. 466
4. II. Romance (8:14)
Performed by Cristina Marton (Piano)
and the Württemberg Chamber Orchestra,
conducted by Ruben Gazarian

Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750):
5. Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring (3:46)
"Jesus bleibet meine Freude"
from the Cantata "Heart and Mouth and Deed and Life", BWV 147
Performed by Christoph Soldan (Piano)

Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849):
Piano Concerto No. 1 in E Minor, Op. 11
(Version for Piano & String Orchestra)
6. II. Romance (9:51)
Performed by Franz Vorraber (Piano & Conducting)
and the Castle Concerts Orchestra

Johannes Brahms (1833-1897):
8 Pieces for Piano, Op. 76
7. No. 3: Intermezzo in A-Flat Major (2:40)
Performed by Lilya Zilberstein (Piano)

Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849):
3 Mazurkas, Op. 50
8. No. 3: Mazurka No. 32 in C-Sharp Minor. Moderato (5:15)
Performed by Magdalena Müllerperth (Piano)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
Piano Concerto No. 16 in D Major, K. 451
9. II. Andante (6:05)
Performed by Cristina Marton (Piano)
and the Württemberg Chamber Orchestra,
conducted by Ruben Gazarian

Franz Schubert (1797-1828):
Piano Sonata No. 14 in A Minor, D. 784, Op.posth.143
10. II. Andante (4:03)
Performed by Severin von Eckardstein (Piano)

Robert Schumann (1810-1856):
Piano Sonata No. 2 in G Minor, Op. 22
11. II. Andantino (4:45)
Performed by Magdalena Müllerperth (Piano)


Sound & Recording Engineer: Andreas Otto Grimminger

Production & Mastering: Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler

Photography, Artwork & Coverdesign: Josef-Stefan Kindler

Mozart: Serenade No. 10 in B-Flat Major, K. 361 "Gran Partita"

Album Cover
EUR 4,90
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
Serenade No. 10 for Winds

in B-Flat Major, K. 361 "Gran Partita"

Performed by the Thaous Ensemble

A live recording from Bad Homburg Castle in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · c. 46 Minutes
Digital Music Album · 7 Tracks

FILES
Previews

Work(s) & Performance
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

M

ozart composed the Gran Partita in 1780 for the Munich Court. He could count on some of the best virtuosi of his day to perform it, including his friend Anton Stadler - and Amadeus took full advantage of this. The serenade octet normally used until then was expanded what was more or less an orchestra, allowing Mozart to create a divertimento on the grand scale - not least because he was hoping that the Munich Court would provide him with a solution to his unloved responsibilities. However, the sonatinas of Mozart admirer Richard Strauss pick up on the ambience of the Gran Partita in the most remarkable way and are totally in the tradition of court entertainment in Mozart's time, even though they were written a century and a half later.

Performer(s)
Thaous Ensemble

T

he 18th century saw the composition of numerous pieces for wind instrument octets. In the Classical era, what was then known as "Harmoniemusik" was composed especially for them. The Thaous Ensemble ('thaous' is Egyptian for peacock) has dedicated itself to this tradition. The ensemble is a wind octet in the truly classic sense, with two pairs of oboes, clarinets, bassoons and horns, and some of the musicians have been playing together since their early youth. They were either members of Baden-Württenberg's Young Chamber Philharmonic Orchestra or they got to know each other when they were students. In the meantime, they are all soloists in prestigious orchestras, or professors and lecturers at various cultural institutions at home or abroad - the Frankfurt or the Würzburg Universities of Music and Performing Arts, for instance. Or the Hamburg State Opera, the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Zurich Opera House or the Deutsche Sinfonieorchester Berlin. Every single member of the Ensemble has won important prizes at national and international competitions. Some of them have held scholarships from the German President or from the German "Studienstiftung" and work regularly with top ensembles like the "Ensemble Modern". But more than anything else, the hallmark of the Thaous Ensemble is adaptability, because - depending on what is called for - the regular musicians in this classic wind octet will open their ranks to include soloists from elsewhere - from Hesse Public Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Gewandhaus Orchestra in Leipzig, the Frankfurt Opera and the Deutsche Oper Berlin.

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

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Release Type: Work Albums

Romantic Strings · Vol. 2

Album Cover
EUR 9,90
Compilation
Romantic Strings · Vol. 2

Live recordings from Maulbronn Monastery and Bad Homburg Castle
featuring works for Strings and for Orchestra
by Dvorak, Bach, Vivaldi, Mozart, Telemann, Beethoven, Ferrandini & Gounod

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: c. 58 Minutes
11 Tracks incl. Digital Booklet

FILES
Previews

Work(s) & Performance

Dvořák: Serenade for Strings in E Major

The Serenade for Strings in E Major, Op. 22 / B. 52,
by Antonín Dvořák (1841-1904)

Antonín Dvořák's Serenade for Strings in E major, Op. 22 was composed in just two weeks in May 1875. It remains one of the composer's more popular orchestral works to this day. 1875 was a fruitful year for Dvořák, during which he wrote his Symphony No. 5, String Quintet No. 2, Piano Trio No. 1, the opera Vanda, and the Moravian Duets. These were happy times in his life. His marriage was young, and his first son had been born. For the first time in his life, he was being recognized as a composer and without fear of poverty. He received a generous stipend from a commission in Vienna, which allowed him to compose his Fifth Symphony and several chamber works as well as the Serenade. Dvořák is said to have written the Serenade in just 12 days, from 3-14 May. The piece was premiered in Prague on 10 December 1876 by Adolf Čech and the combined orchestras of the Czech and German theatres. It was published in 1877 in the composer's piano duet arrangement by Emanuel Starý in Prague. The score was printed two years later by Bote and Bock, Berlin. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Bach: Concerto for 2 Violins in D Minor, BWV 1043

The Concerto for 2 Violins in D Minor, BWV 1043,
by Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)

The Concerto for Two Violins, Strings, and Continuo in D minor, BWV 1043, also known as "The Double Violin Concerto", is perhaps one of the most famous works by Johann Sebastian Bach and considered among the best examples of the work of the late Baroque period. Bach may have written it between 1717 and 1723 when he was the Kapellmeister at the court of Anhalt-Köthen, Germany, though the work's performance materials for the Ordinaire Concerten that Bach ran as the Director of the Collegium Musicum in Leipzig are dated c. 1730–31. Later in 1739, in Leipzig, he created an arrangement for two harpsichords, transposed into C minor, BWV 1062. In addition to the two soloists, the concerto is scored for strings and basso continuo. The concerto is characterized by the subtle yet expressive relationship between the violins throughout the work. The musical structure of this piece uses fugal imitation and much counterpoint. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Vivaldi: Concerto Grosso in D Minor, Op. 3 No. 11, RV 565

The Concerto Grosso in D Minor, Op. 3 No. 11, RV 565, from: "L'Estro Armonico",
by Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741)

L'Estro Armonico (the harmonic inspiration), Antonio Vivaldi's Op. 3, is a set of 12 concertos for stringed instruments, first published in Amsterdam in 1711. Vivaldi's Twelve Trio Sonatas, Op. 1, and Twelve Violin Sonatas, Op. 2, only contained sonatas, thus L'estro armonico was his first collection of concertos appearing in print. It was also the first time he chose a foreign publisher, Estienne Roger, instead of an Italian. Each concerto was printed in eight parts: four violins, two violas, cello and continuo. The continuo part was printed as a figured bass for violone and harpsichord. The concertos belong to the concerto a 7 format, that is: for each concerto there are seven independent parts. In each consecutive group of three concertos, the first is a concerto for four violins, the second for two violins, and the third a solo violin concerto. The cello gets solistic passages in several of the concertos for four and two violins, so that a few of the concertos conform to the traditional Roman concerto grosso format where a concertino of two violins and cello plays in contrast to a string orchestra. L'estro armonico pioneered orchestral unisono in concerto movements. Vivaldi composed a few concertos specifically for L'estro armonico, while other concertos of the set had been composed at an earlier date. Vivaldi scholar Michael Talbot described the set as "perhaps the most influential collection of instrumental music to appear during the whole of the eighteenth century". L'estro armonico (the harmonic inspiration) was published as Antonio Vivaldi's Op. 3 in Amsterdam in 1711. Vivaldi's Op. 1 and Op. 2 had only contained sonatas, thus L'estro armonico was his first collection of concertos appearing in print. It was also the first time Vivaldi chose a foreign publisher, Estienne Roger, instead of an Italian. Vivaldi composed a few concertos specifically for L'estro armonico, while other concertos of the set had been composed at an earlier date. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Mozart: Symphony No. 40 in G Minor, K. 550 "The Great G Minor Symphony"

The Symphony No. 40 in G Minor, K. 550 "The Great G Minor Symphony",
by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)

The Symphony No. 40 in G minor, K. 550, was written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1788. It is sometimes referred to as the "Great G minor symphony", to distinguish it from the "Little G minor symphony", No. 25. The two are the only extant minor key symphonies Mozart wrote.
The date of completion of this symphony is known exactly, since Mozart in his mature years kept a full catalog of his completed works; he entered the 40th Symphony into it on 25 July 1788. Work on the symphony occupied an exceptionally productive period of just a few weeks during which time he also completed the 39th and 41st symphonies (26 June and 10 August, respectively). Nikolaus Harnoncourt conjectured that Mozart composed the three symphonies as a unified work, pointing, among other things, to the fact that the Symphony No. 40, as the middle work, has no introduction (unlike No. 39) and does not have a finale of the scale of No. 41's. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Telemann: Viola Concerto in G Major, TWV 51:G9

The Viola Concerto in G Major, TWV 51:G9,
by Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767)

Of Georg Philipp Telemann's surviving concertos, his Viola Concerto in G major, TWV 51:G9 is among his most famous, and still regularly performed today. It is the first known concerto for viola and was written circa 1716–1721. It consists of four movements:
Largo: A mellow movement with long notes. Written in 3/2, with many dotted quarter and eighth note slurs, and is in the key of G. Usually is played with vibrato. Some performers choose to add significant ornamentation to this very simple movement.
Allegro: Most played movement. Written in 4/4 and in the key of G. The melody begins with a distinctive syncopated figure which is also used independently later in the movement.
Andante: A slow, mellow movement in the relative minor and largely on the upper strings of the instrument.
Presto: A fast, exciting movement in the tonic key.
The fast movements contain very few slurs, and many performers' editions include slurring suggestions, often indistinguishable from markings contained in the original. The performer is encouraged to invent a varied pattern of slurs which fits the shape of each phrase.
The slow movements both give the option of a cadenza. A typical performance lasts about 14 minutes. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Beethoven: String Quartet No. 8 in E Minor, Op. 59 No. 2 "2nd Razumovsky Quartet"

The String Quartet No. 8 in E Minor, Op. 59 No. 2 "2nd Razumovsky Quartet",
by Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827)

The String Quartet No. 8 in E minor, Op. 59, No. 2, was written by Ludwig van Beethoven and published in 1808. This work is the second of three of his ".Rasumovsky". cycle of string quartets, and is a product of his ".middle". It is in four movements... According to Carl Czerny, the second movement of the quartet occurred to Beethoven as he contemplated the starry sky and thought of the music of the spheres (Thayer, Life of Beethoven); it has a hymnlike quality reminiscent of a much later devotion, the "Heiliger Dankgesang" hymn to the Divine in the Quartet Op. 132. The scherzo movement of the quartet, the third movement (allegretto), uses a Russian theme also used by Modest Mussorgsky in Boris Godunov, by Anton Arensky in his String Quartet No. 2 in A Minor, and by Sergei Rachmaninoff in his 6 Morceaux for Piano Duet, Op. 11. The original song, "Glory to the Sun", was recorded by Nikolay Lvov and Jan Prac; sheet music was published in 1790 (second edition 1806), verses in the 1770s. However, Beethoven used it in an ungentle way. According to Kerman, "It sounds as though Count Razumovsky had been tactless enough to hand Beethoven the tune, and Beethoven is pile-driving it into the ground by way of revenge." In an extremely unusual example of melodic setting prior to the 20th century, portions of the tune with strong tonic harmonic leanings are harmonized with the dominant, and vice versa; the harmonic clash is harsh, and many listeners have found this portion of the quartet to be quite amusing, especially as contrasted with the prosaic, almost "exercise-book" counterpoint which precedes it (another example of Beethoven parodying a student counterpoint exercise can be found in the scherzo of the Quartet No. 10, opus 74). (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Mozart: Symphony No. 36 in C Major, K. 425 "Linz Symphony"

The Symphony No. 36 in C Major, K. 425 "Linz Symphony",
by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)

The Symphony No. 36 in C major, K. 425, (known as the "Linz Symphony") was written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart during a stopover in the Austrian town of Linz on his and his wife's way back home to Vienna from Salzburg in late 1783. The entire symphony was written in four days to accommodate the local count's announcement, upon hearing of the Mozarts' arrival in Linz, of a concert. The première in Linz took place on 4 November 1783. The composition was also premièred in Vienna on 1 April 1784. The autograph score of the "Linz Symphony" was not preserved. [From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]

Vivaldi: Concerto for Strings in G Minor, RV 157

The Concerto for Strings in G Minor, RV 157,
by Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741)

The first works of the "concerto" genre were actually intended to be performed by a large instrumental ensemble (string orchestra and basso continuo) and not by groups of soloists. It is not surprising, however, that the principal violin in such a large grouping soon demanded special tasks. From this, the dialogue between tutti and solo that dominates today finally developed. An early master of this type of composition and the driving force behind its development was the Italian Antonio Vivaldi. The Concerto in G minor RV 157 is still owed to the form without a real solo voice. It begins with a powerful movement in which the two violin parts are in dialogue. A strict largo with dotted rhythm is followed by the sweeping finale, which is somewhat reminiscent of the "summer" of the "Four Seasons". (Irene Schallhorn)

Charles Gounod: Messe solennelle de Saint-Cécile

The Messe solennelle de Saint-Cécile (St. Cecilia Mass)
by Charles Gounod (1818-1893)

Charles Gounod has become famous for his opera "Margarete" above all. It is hardly known that his first passion was clerical music. The "Messe solennelle de Saint-Cécile" is worth to be called the most beautiful among his numerous clerical compositions. The work is distinguished by a maze of marvellous melodies, an extremly lined-up orchestra and the harmonious interconnection of solists and choir. The first staging of the mass was in November, 22. 1855 at St. Eustache in Paris. Gounod wrote the work for the celebration of St. Cecile, who is the patroness of clerical music. With certain instinct he combined the dramatic counterparts of clerical music and motifs and melodies of the Grand Opera. The plain covering figures of the orchestra above all give a uniform mood to the sets of the mass, which manifests itself in sacral dignity.



Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

The concerts at the UNESCO World Heritage Maulbronn Monastery supply the ideal conditions for our aspirations. It is, above all, the atmosphere of the romantic, candle-lit arches, the magic of the monastery in its unadulterated sublime presence and tranquillity that impresses itself upon the performers and audience of these concerts. Renowned soloists and ensembles from the international arena repeatedly welcome the opportunity to appear here - enjoying the unparalleled acoustic and architectural beauty of this World Heritage Site, providing exquisite performances of secular and sacred music, documented by us in our Maulbronn Monastery Edition.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Works, Movements & Tracklist

Antonín Dvořák (1841-1904):
Serenade for Strings, Op. 22, B. 52
1. IV. Larghetto [4:28]
Performed by the Beethoven Academy Orchestra,
conducted by Pawel Przytocki

Giovanni Battista Ferrandini (1710-1791):
2. Se d'un Dio (Instrumental Version) [0:46]
from the cantata "Il pianto di Maria",
so far ascribed to George Frideric Handel as HWV 234
Performed by the Ensemble il capriccio

Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750):
Concerto for 2 Violins in D Minor, BWV 1043
3. II. Largo ma non tanto [6:14]
Performed by the Lautten Compagney Berlin,
feat. Birgit Schnurpfeil & Julia Schröder (Solo-Violins)

Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741):
Concerto Grosso in D Minor, Op. 3 No. 11, RV 565
4. II. Largo e spiccato [2:26]
From: "L'Estro Armonico"
Performed by the Lautten Compagney Berlin,
feat. Birgit Schnurpfeil & Matthias Hummel (Solo-Violins)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
Symphony No. 40 in G Minor, K. 550
"The Great G Minor Symphony"
5. I. Molto Allegro [6:02]
Performed by the Wuerttemberg Chamber Orchestra,
conducted by Jörg Faerber

Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767):
Viola Concerto in G Major, TWV 51:G9
6. I. Largo [3:30]
Performed by the Quantz Collegium,
feat. Kilian Ziegler (Viola)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
Symphony No. 40 in G Minor, K. 550
"The Great G Minor Symphony"
7. II. Andante [8:25]
Performed by the Wuerttemberg Chamber Orchestra,
conducted by Jörg Faerber

Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827):
String Quartet No. 8 in E Minor, Op. 59, No. 2
"2nd Razumovsky Quartet"
8. II. Molto Adagio [12:19]
Performed by the Rubin Quartet

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
Symphony No. 36 in C Major, K. 425
"Linz Symphony"

9. II. Andante [8:48]
Performed by the Silesian Chamber Orchestra,
conducted by Pawel Przytocki

Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741):
Concerto for Strings in G Minor, RV 157
10. II. Largo [1:39]
Performed by the Lautten Compagney Berlin

Charles Gounod (1818-1893):
Messe solennelle de Saint-Cécile
"St. Cecilia Mass"
11. IV. Offertorium [3:41]
Performed by members of the SWR-Symphony-Orchestra Baden-Baden & Freiburg,
conducted by Jürgen Budday


Live recordings from Maulbronn Monastery and Bad Homburg Castle

Sound & Recording Engineer: Andreas Otto Grimminger

Production & Mastering: Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler

Photography, Artwork & Coverdesign: Josef-Stefan Kindler

Review

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Romantic Strings · Vol. 1

Album Cover
EUR 9,90
Compilation
Romantic Strings · Vol. 1

Live recordings from Maulbronn Monastery and Bad Homburg Castle
featuring works for Strings and for Orchestra
by Elgar, Tchaikovsky, Dvorak, Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven, Porpora & Bach

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: c. 75 Minutes
12 Tracks incl. Digital Booklet


FILES
Previews

Work(s) & Performance
Elgar: Serenade for String Orchestra in E Minor

The Serenade for String Orchestra in E Minor, Op. 20, by Edward Elgar (1857-1934)

In music Edward Elgar was a "self made man", who first practiced the small form before gradually approaching the great musical genres. A milestone on this path was the extremely charming Serenade for String Orchestra Op. 20, which was composed in 1892. For this, Elgar probably fell back on a lost composition from 1888. It seems the immediate trigger for the final version of this work was the invitation of a friend to visit the "Bayreuth Festspiele". Elgar studied the creations of Richard Wagner intensively during his autodidactic studies and took up Wagner's opera "Parsifal", which left significant traces in this Serenade - the first composition with which he was fully satisfied. Apparently the publisher Novello, to whom he offered the composition, had a different opinion. Novello did not accept Elgar's offer with the reason, that this kind of music would practically unsaleable. Today this lovely three-part piece is one of the most performed works by the "Englishman", who became famous later with great compositions - not only with his best-known "Pomp & Circumstance March No. 1".

Souvenir de Florence by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

Souvenir de Florence for String Orchestra, Op. 70, by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893)

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) is considered as the most important Russian composer of the 19th century. He composed 'Souvenir de Florence' in 1890, thus during his later period, and dedicated the work to the St. Petersburg Chamber Music Society in response to his appointment as an Honorary Member. Originally scored for string sextet (2 violins, 2 violas and 2 cellos), Tchaikovsky arranged the work later also for string orchestra. The title 'Memory of Florence' probably originates from the fact that the composer started working on it while visiting Florence in Italy.

Dvořák: Serenade for Strings in E Major

The Serenade for Strings in E Major, Op. 22 / B. 52, by Antonín Dvořák (1841-1904)

Antonín Dvořák's Serenade for Strings in E major, Op. 22 was composed in just two weeks in May 1875. It remains one of the composer's more popular orchestral works to this day. 1875 was a fruitful year for Dvořák, during which he wrote his Symphony No. 5, String Quintet No. 2, Piano Trio No. 1, the opera Vanda, and the Moravian Duets. These were happy times in his life. His marriage was young, and his first son had been born. For the first time in his life, he was being recognized as a composer and without fear of poverty. He received a generous stipend from a commission in Vienna, which allowed him to compose his Fifth Symphony and several chamber works as well as the Serenade. Dvořák is said to have written the Serenade in just 12 days, from 3-14 May. The piece was premiered in Prague on 10 December 1876 by Adolf Čech and the combined orchestras of the Czech and German theatres. It was published in 1877 in the composer's piano duet arrangement by Emanuel Starý in Prague. The score was printed two years later by Bote and Bock, Berlin. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Mozart: Violin Concerto No. 5

The Violin Concerto No. 5 in A Major, K. 219 "Turkish", by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)

The Violin Concerto No. 5 in A major, K. 219, often referred to by the nickname 'The Turkish', was written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1775, premiering during the Christmas season that year in Salzburg. It follows the typical fast-slow-fast musical structure. Mozart composed the majority of his concertos for string instruments from 1773 to 1779, but it is unknown for whom, or for what occasion, he wrote them. Similarly, the dating of these works is unclear. Analysis of the handwriting, papers and watermarks has proved that all five violin concertos were re-dated several times. The year of composition of the fifth concerto "1775" was scratched out and replaced by "1780", and later changed again to "1775". Mozart would not use the key of A major for a concerto again until the Piano Concerto No. 12 (K. 414). (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Joseph Haydn: String Quartet No. 63 in B-Flat Major

The String Quartet No. 63 in B-Flat Major, Op. 76 No. 4, Hob. III:78 "Sunrise", by Joseph Haydn (1732-1809)

Haydn's string quartet cycle op. 76 came into being due to a common practice of the time, whereby princes, kings, merchants or high-ranking clerics would commission their subordinate court musicians to write pieces of music. Haydn received 100 ducats from Count Joseph Erdödy for the six quartets in 1797. More than two hundred years later they appear like the sum of his art within this genre that he influenced so greatly. The "Sunrise Quartet" in B flat major is the fourth quartet of the work. The name was given retrospectively and is extremely apt: in the first movement, after a few attempts, the first violin leaps from faint sounds into a resonating B major fortissimo that emerges like the rising sun.

Beethoven: Piano Trio No. 6 in E-Flat Major

The Piano Trio No. 6 in E-Flat Major, Op. 70 No. 2, by Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827)

Carl Czerny, composer and student of Beethoven, sayed about the Piano Trio in E-flat Major: "this trio is no less great or original than its successor (Piano Trio in D Major, Op. 70, No. 1), but it is of a very different, less serious character." The trio in e-flat major was composed during the summer of 1808 immediately after the Sixth Symphony, and applies foreseen traits to Romanticism. Beethoven expands his realm of expression here in two somewhat converse directions: both in a seemingly romantically tonal colourfulness, and towards the inclusion of classic style elements by means of a stricter introduction.

Bach: Sonata No. 3, BWV 1016

The Sonata No. 3 for Violin and Harpsichord, BWV 1016, by Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)

The "Six Sonatas for Violin and Obbligato Harpsichord", BWV 1014 - 1019, by Johann Sebastian Bach are works in trio sonata form, with the two upper parts in the harpsichord and violin over a bass line supplied by the harpsichord and an optional viola da gamba. Unlike baroque sonatas for solo instrument and continuo, where the realisation of the figured bass was left to the discretion of the performer, the keyboard part in the sonatas was almost entirely specified by Bach. They were probably mostly composed during Bach's final years in Cöthen between 1720 and 1723, before he moved to Leipzig. The extant sources for the collection span the whole of Bach's period in Leipzig, during which time he continued to make changes to the score. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Mozart: Symphony No. 29 in A Major, K. 201

The Symphony No. 29 in A Major, K. 201, by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)

The Symphony No. 29 in A major, K. 201/186a, was completed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart on 6 April 1774. It is, along with Symphony No. 25, one of his better known early symphonies. Stanley Sadie characterizes it as "a landmark... personal in tone, indeed perhaps more individual in its combination of an intimate, chamber music style with a still fiery and impulsive manner." (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Porpora: Cello Sonata No. 1

The Sonata No. 1 in C Major for Violin, Cello & Basso continuo by Nicola Porpora (1686-1768)

Nicola Antonio Porpora (17 August 1686 - 3 March 1768) was an Italian composer and teacher of singing of the Baroque era, whose most famous singing students were the castrati Farinelli and Caffarelli. Other students included composers Matteo Capranica and Joseph Haydn. Porpora was born in Naples. He graduated from the music conservatory Poveri di Gesù Cristo of his native city, where the civic opera scene was dominated by Alessandro Scarlatti. Porpora's first opera, Agrippina, was successfully performed at the Neapolitan court in 1708. His second, Berenice, was performed at Rome. In a long career, he followed these up by many further operas, supported as maestro di cappella in the households of aristocratic patrons, such as the commander of military forces at Naples, prince Philip of Hesse-Darmstadt, or of the Portuguese ambassador at Rome, for composing operas alone did not yet make a viable career. However, his enduring fame rests chiefly upon his unequalled power of teaching singing. At the Neapolitan Conservatorio di Sant'Onofrio and with the Poveri di Gesù Cristo he trained Farinelli, Caffarelli, Salimbeni, and other celebrated vocalists, during the period 1715 to 1721. In 1720 and 1721 he wrote two serenades to libretti by a gifted young poet, Metastasio, the beginning of a long, though interrupted, collaboration. In 1722 his operatic successes encouraged him to lay down his conservatory commitments. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Mozart: String Quartet No. 14

The String Quartet No. 14 in G Major, Op. 10 No. 1, K. 387 "Spring Quartet", by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)

The String Quartet No. 14 in G major, K. 387, nicknamed the "Spring" quartet, was composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1782 while in Vienna. In the composer's inscription on the title page of the autograph score is stated: "li 31 di decembre 1782 in vienna". The work was perhaps edited in 1783. This is the first of the Haydn Quartets, a set of six string quartets he wrote during his first few years in Vienna in honor of the composer Joseph Haydn, who is generally viewed as the father of the string quartet form. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Mozart: Symphony No. 21

The Symphony No. 21 in A Major, K. 134, by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)

The Symphony No. 21 in A major, K. 134, was composed by Mozart in August 1772. The symphony has the scoring of two flutes, two horns, and strings. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)









Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

The concerts at the UNESCO World Heritage Maulbronn Monastery supply the ideal conditions for our aspirations. It is, above all, the atmosphere of the romantic, candle-lit arches, the magic of the monastery in its unadulterated sublime presence and tranquillity that impresses itself upon the performers and audience of these concerts. Renowned soloists and ensembles from the international arena repeatedly welcome the opportunity to appear here - enjoying the unparalleled acoustic and architectural beauty of this World Heritage Site, providing exquisite performances of secular and sacred music, documented by us in our Maulbronn Monastery Edition.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Works, Movements & Tracklist

Edward Elgar (1857-1934):
Serenade in E Minor, Op. 20
1. II. Larghetto (5:49)
Performed by the Mainz Chamber Orchestra,
conducted by Gernot Schulz

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893):
Souvenir de Florence, Op. 70
(Version for String Orchestra)
2. II. Adagio cantabile (9:42)
Performed by the Southwest German Chamber Orchestra,
conducted by Sebastian Tewinkel

Antonín Dvořák (1841-1904):
Serenade for Strings, Op. 22, B. 52
3. I. Moderato [3:48]
4. II. Tempo di valse (5:59)
Performed by the Beethoven Academy Orchestra,
conducted by Pawel Przytocki

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
Violin Concerto No. 5 in A Major
K. 219 "Turkish"

5. II. Adagio (9:33)
Performed by Linus Roth (Violin)
and the Württemberg Chamber Orchestra,
conducted by Jörg Faerber

Joseph Haydn (1732-1809):
String Quartet No. 63 in B-Flat Major
Op. 76 No. 4, Hob. III:78 "Sunrise"

6. II. Adagio (5:43)
Performed by the Rubin Quartet

Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827):
Piano Trio No. 6 in E-Flat Major, Op. 70 No. 2
7. III. Allegretto ma non troppo (7:36)
Performed by the Trio Fontenay

Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750):
Sonata No. 3 for Violin and Harpsichord, BWV 1016
8. I. Adagio (4:23)
Performed by the Wolfgang Bauer Consort,
feat. Sebastian Hamann (Violin) & Thomas Strauss (Harpsichord)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
Symphony No. 29 in A Major, K. 201
9. II. Andante (7:15)
Performed by the Mainz Chamber Orchestra,
conducted by Gernot Schulz

Nicola Porpora (1686-1768):
Sonata No. 1 in C Major for Violin, Cello & Basso continuo
10. III. Tempo giusto (1:46)
Performed by the Ensemble Nel Dolce

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
String Quartet No. 14 in G Major, Op. 10 No. 1, K. 387 "Spring"
11. III. Andante cantabile (7:20)
Performed by the Rubin Quartet

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
Symphony No. 21 in A Major, K. 134
12. II. Andante (5:44)
Performed by the South-West German Chamber Orchestra,
conducted by Timo Handschuh


Live recordings from Maulbronn Monastery and Bad Homburg Castle

Sound & Recording Engineer: Andreas Otto Grimminger

Production & Mastering: Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler

Photography, Artwork & Design: Josef-Stefan Kindler

Review

Comments on YouTube

"Heartbreaking" (nurwer)
"Wonderful" (mahergad1)
"MMmmmmmmmmmm... so so peaceful! I love it!" (Stephanie)
"Briliant performance" (my last escape)
"Beautiful!" (Josef Meier)
"Beautiful... both audibly and visibly." (Joseph Anthony)


Schumann: Piano Quintet in E-Flat Major, Op. 44

Track

Album Cover
EUR 3,80
Robert Schumann (1810-1856):
Piano Quintet in E-Flat Major

Op. 44

Perfomed by Christoph Soldan (Piano)
and the Stuttgart Chamber Soloists

A live recording from the Rossini Concert Hall
in Bad Kissingen (Germany)

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 29:22
Digital Album [here: MP3, 320kB/sec.]
4 Tracks incl. Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Work(s) & Performance
Robert Schumann

T

he Piano Quintet in E-flat major, Op. 44, by Robert Schumann was composed in 1842 and received its first public performance the following year. Noted for its "extroverted, exuberant" character, Schumann's piano quintet is considered one of his finest compositions and a major work of nineteenth-century chamber music. Composed for piano and string quartet, the work revolutionized the instrumentation and musical character of the piano quintet and established it as a quintessentially Romantic genre.
Clara Schumann (née Wieck) in 1838. Robert Schumann dedicated the piano quintet to Clara, and she performed the piano part in the work's first public performance in 1843.
Schumann composed his piano quintet in just a few weeks in September and October 1842, in the course of his so-called "Chamber Music Year". Prior to 1842, Schumann had completed no chamber music at all with the exception of an early piano quartet (in 1829). However, during his year-long concentration on chamber music he composed three string quartets, Op. 41; followed by the piano quintet, Op. 44; a piano quartet, Op. 47; and the Phantasiestücke for piano trio, Op. 88.
Schumann began his career primarily as a composer for the keyboard, and after his detour into writing for string quartet, according to Joan Chisell, his "reunion with the piano" in composing a piano quintet gave "his creative imagination ... a new lease on life".
John Daverio has argued that Schumann's piano quintet was influenced by Franz Schubert's Piano Trio No. 2 in E-flat major, a work Schumann admired. Both works are in the key of E-flat, feature a funeral march in the second movement, and conclude with finales that dramatically resurrect earlier thematic material.
Schumann dedicated the piano quintet to his wife, the great pianist Clara Schumann. She was due to perform the piano part for the first private performance of the quintet on 6 December 1842. However, she fell ill and Felix Mendelssohn stepped in, sight-reading the "fiendish" piano part. Mendelssohn's suggestions to Schumann after this performance led the composer to make revisions to the inner movements, including the addition of a second trio to the third movement.
Clara Schumann did play the piano part at the first public performance of the piano quintet on 8 January 1843, at the Leipzig Gewandhaus. Clara pronounced the work "splendid, full of vigor and freshness". She often performed the work throughout her life. On one occasion, however, Robert Schumann asked a male pianist to replace Clara in a performance of the quintet, remarking that "a man understands that better".
Schumann's piano quintet is scored for piano and string quartet (two violins, viola, and cello).
By pairing the piano with string quartet, Schumann "virtually invented" a new genre. Prior to Schumann, piano quintets were ordinarily composed for keyboard, violin, viola, cello, and double bass. (This is the instrumentation for Schubert's Trout Quintet, for example.)
Schumann's choice to deviate from this model and pair the piano with a standard string quartet lineup reflects the changing technical capabilities and cultural importance, respectively, of these instruments. By 1842, the string quartet had come to be regarded as the most significant and prestigious chamber music ensemble, while advances in the design of the piano had increased its power and dynamic range. Bringing the piano and string quartet together, Schumann's Piano Quintet takes full advantage of the expressive possibilities of these forces in combination, alternating conversational passages between the five instruments with concertante passages in which the combined forces of the strings are massed against the piano. At a time when chamber music was moving out of the salon and into public concert halls, Schumann reimagines the piano quintet as a musical genre "suspended between private and public spheres" alternating between "quasi-symphonic and more properly chamber-like elements".
[From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]

Performer(s)
Christoph Soldan

T

he pianist Christoph Soldan studied under Professors Eliza Hansen and Christoph Eschenbach at the Hamburg Musikhochschule. His break-through to active international concert playing came in a tour with Leonard Bernstein in summer 1989. Of Christoph Soldan, the world-famous director said, "I am impressed by the soulful size of this young musician". Since then, Soldan has played in numerous tours with renowned orchestras across Europe and abroad. In particular, this can be seen in the CD recordings of all of Mozart's piano concertos, which were performed and recorded from 1996 until 2006. A tour of piano evenings took place in Mexico and other countries in Central America in October 1997. In August 1998 he debuted in Salzburg and in the Chamber Music Hall of the Berlin Philharmonic, and in May 1999 in the Leipzig Gewandhaus. In March 2000, there were three piano evenings in Japan. So far, there have been radio and television productions with the Hessische Rundfunk (Frankfurt), Deutschlandfunk, SWR, ORF and ZDF. The Bayerische Rundfunk broadcasted his piano evening in the Munich Residenz in October 1998 and his concert at the Bad Brückenau music Festival live in 1999. Radio Bremen braodcasted his recital in Bremen in august 2002. Starting in 1996, Soldan was Performing all 27 piano concertos by Mozart together with the slovakian chamber orchestra CAPPELLA ISTROPOLITANA, the chamber orchestra of PFORZHEIM and the SILESIAN CHAMBER ORCHESTRA Katowice. This cycle of concerts ended in January 2006, performing the concertos for 2 and 3 pianos. Christoph Soldan developed a "pas de deux for piano and dance", together with his wife, the dancer and choreographer Stefanie Goes. The premiere took place in Stuttgart in May 2000.
In Spring 2001 he participated the Prague Spring Festival accompanied by the slovakian chamber-orchestra "Cappella Istropolitana". Two recitals in Hamburg and Berlin were followed by a live-recording of two Mozart piano concertos in the medieval monastery of Maulbronn in September 2002. In January 2004 the première of the new Dance project "something about humans and angels" took place in Stuttgart followed by a concert-tour to South Africa. Since 2007 Soldan is working also as a conductor concerning the performances of piano concertos by Bach and Mozart. In the next season Christoph Soldan will be guesting in Germany, Italy, Spain, Austria, Poland and Slovakia with various programmes such as recitals, literary concerts, childrens concerts, as soloist with 5 of Mozart's piano-concertos, Schumann's piano concerto, Mendelssohn's doubleconcerto, Chopin's e-minor concerto, Beethovens 4th piano concerto as well as in chamber Music programmes with Brahms' piano quintet op. 34 and Schubert's "trout" quintett. Since 1994 Christoph Soldan is artistic director of a several chambermusic festivals in Germany. In 2007 together with his wife Soldan founded a theatre in the north of Baden-Württemberg between Stuttgart and Heidelberg, the "Theater Dörzbach" (www.theaterdoerzbach.de), where all artistic programmes are taking place since then. The German press describes Christoph Soldan as an "artist personality, who works with the spiritual intensity and soulful dimension of a piece of music, rather than giving a purely technical virtuoso performance". This challenge to music and to himself is rarely seen today.

Stuttgart Chamber Soloists

I

n 2014, the leader and manager of the Kammersinfonie Stuttgart and the Pianist Christoph Soldan took the initiative to create the Stuttgart Chamber Soloists, based on the groupleaders of the Kammersinfonie Stuttgart.

Daniel Rehfeldt ~ Violin & Leader
Yuki Mukai ~ Violin
Igor Michalski ~ Viola
Hugo Rannou ~ Cello

The idea of the new ensemble was, to aquire and perform classical chamber music as well as symphonic repertoire, as the celebrated Stringserenades (Tchaikovsky, Suk, Fuchs...) and various Concertos for Piano and Orchestra (Mozart and Beethoven). An extensive concert series in germany was followed by a big success. In 2015 Christoph Soldan and the Stuttgart Chamber Soloists presented their repertoire in Italy, Spain and France. During springtime 2017, the artists performed several concerts with different programms in Germany ("Mozart-Woche" at the Abbey Seeon, Krefeld, Esslingen, the "Theater Dörzbach", Schwandorf, Bööblingen und Sigmaringen). Since 2018 the ensemble is part of the regular concert series "Schlosskonzerte" of Kulturgipfel München. Performing in the "Nymphenburg" Munich, "Neues Schloss" Stuttgart, "Kasino" Wiesbaden, "Parktheater" Augsburg and "Allerheilig Hofkirche" Munich. The ensemble has been constituted a very high level performance and the illusion of the sound from a much bigger sized orchestra.
Daniel Rehfeldt was born in 1973 in a musicians family. He was brought to music in very early years, learning the violin, the piano and the trumpet. He won several prices as the 1. Preis "Jugend Musiziert", Tonkünstlerwettbewerb, "Parke&Davis-Förderpreis". He studied with very well known teachers like Prof. Kolja Lessing (Stuttgart), Prof. Robert-Alexander Bohnke (Freiburg) and Prof. Werner Stiefel (Reutlingen) and Klaus-Peter Hahn (Stuttgart). He continued his studies at the "Mozarteum" Salzburg (Prof. Paul Roczek and Prof. Jürgen Geise) and Baroque-Violin and ancient music at the Bruckner Conservatorie Linz (Prof. Michi Gaigg) and the Trossingen Musikhochschule (Prof. John Holloway). After his studies Daniel Rehfeldt performed as soloist and leader from Kammerensemble Cologne, and with various chamber-music-groups, such as Manchester Oboe Quartet, Jade Quartet, Soldan Trio and Adular Quartet Stuttgart. His concerts brought him all over Europe, Russia, Taiwan, Australia, Africa, China and Korea. From 2013 to 2016 Daniel Rehfeldt was leader of the Philharmonie Baden-Baden and shared the stage with international high class musicians. From 2011 Daniel Rehfeldt is leader and manager of the KammerSinfonie Stuttgart. Since 2016 additional director of the Music School in Eislingen.

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

The concert grand piano is incontestably the king of instruments. We could now wax lyrical about its incomparable dynamics and go into its ability to go from the tenderest of sounds in a soft minor key to the magnificent power of a fortissimo, or I could rhapsodise about its impressive size and elegance. But what makes this instrument really fascinating is its individuality, since each one is unique in itself - created by a master. A concert grand has a life all of its own that a virtuoso can really "get into" and hence bring the work of the composer to life. In our Grand Piano Masters Series, we get into the character and soul of the concert grand piano and experience, during the performance itself, the dialogue between the instrument, the virtuoso and the performance space.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

View more releases:

Brunetti: Sextet No. 4 in C Major

Track

Album Cover
EUR 2,85
Gaetano Brunetti (1744-1798):
Sextet No. 4 in C Major

"Sestetto No. 4"

For Flute, 2 Violins, Viola & 2 Cellos,
performed by the Quantz Collegium

A live recording from Rastatt Favorite Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 14:16
Digital Album [here: MP3, 320kB/sec.]
3 Tracks incl. Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Work(s) & Performance
Gaetano Brunetti

G

aetano Brunetti or Cayetano Brunetti (1744 in Fano - 16 December 1798 near Madrid) was a prolific Italian born composer active in Spain under kings Charles III and IV. Though he was musically influential at court and, to a lesser extent, throughout parts of western Europe, very little of his music was published during his lifetime, and not much more has been published since his death. The majority of Brunetti's output (451 pieces) consists of chamber music designed for small ensembles and symphonies for the royal chamber orchestra. His music, with its graceful melodies and periodic phrasing, respects early classical forms and conventions but also incorporates some more progressive and eclectic elements. The dearth of modern editions of Brunetti's compositions has helped limit the number of recordings of his work to a mere handful of releases...
[From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]

Performer(s)

T

he first founding of the Quantz Collegium dates back to 1936, when the then 22-year-old flutist Ernst Friedrich Wilhelm Bodensohn (1914-2003) founded a chamber music ensemble and gave him the name of the "father" of the German flute history, Johann Joachim Quantz. The 2nd World War destroyed all further plans. After the war, Bodensohn became the first solo flutist of the newly founded SWR-Symphony-Orchestra in Baden-Baden and lived there with his family. In addition to his orchestral work under the conductors Hans Rosbaud (1895-1962) and Ernest Bour (1913-2001), he founded in the 1950s with colleagues once again the Quantz Collegium. After discovering the wonderful "Favorite Palace" near Rastatt in Germany, he succeeded with great commitment in 1957 for the first time to perform the "Festive Serenades at Rastatt Favorite Palace". The today since more than 60 years existing concert series is charcterized by one particular aspect: The less known composers of the Baroque and Classical periods should be made accessible to the public by confrontating them with the great, unforgettable masters of music history.

Furthermore, the historical ensemble of the namesake Johann Joachim Quantz at the court of Frederick II. is role model and obligation for a further focus on musical content: The performance of flute music from the Baroque and the Classical era. With these two programmatic weightings, it has now been possible to achieve an extraordinary variety and longevity with this concert series. An inner desire of the ensemble is the helping to preserve the music of the past in its great diversity and to offer it to the public with living performances. The concerts in the splendid "Sala Terrena" (Garden Hall) of the "Rastatt Favorite Palace" (Schloss Favorite Rastatt), combined with the "historical" costumes of the musicians, resulted in the today's special reputation of the concert series and its almost historical dimension.

Since 1982 Jochen Baier has been flutist and since 1991 flutist and leader of the ensemble. Under his direction, the ensemble has developed a wealth of programs through the variety of participating musicians and through intensive researches in libraries and archives. More than 2000 different compositions were performed during this time. During 540 concerts so far (until 2017), about 300 different composers were musically introduced and their curriculum vitae were presented in the historical context with text explanations. So far the concerts have been performed by more than 150 different musicians. Some of whom participated in one concert only. Others, as member of the ensemble, influenced the concert series with their activity through years or decades. View more information (in German) under: www.festliche-serenaden.de.

The Quantz Collegium

Jochen Baier ~ Flute & Artistic Leading
Boriana Baleff & Gundula Jaene ~ Violin
Agata Zieba ~ Viola
Gabriela Bradley & Jörg Rieger ~ Violoncello

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Boccherini: Sextet No. 6 in C Major

Track

Album Cover
EUR 3,80
Luigi Boccherini (1743-1805):
Sextet No. 6 in C Major

G. 466 · "Sextuor No. 6"

For Flute, 2 Violins, Viola & 2 Cellos,
performed by the Quantz Collegium

A live recording from Rastatt Favorite Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 14:13
Digital Album [here: MP3, 320kB/sec.]
4 Tracks incl. Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Work(s) & Performance
Luigi Boccherini

R

idolfo Luigi Boccherini (February 19, 1743 - May 28, 1805) was an Italian composer and cellist of the Classical era whose music retained a courtly and galante style even while he matured somewhat apart from the major European musical centers. He is best known for a minuet from his String Quintet in E, Op. 11, No. 5 (G 275), and the Cello Concerto in B flat major (G 482). The latter work was long known in the heavily altered version by German cellist and prolific arranger Friedrich Grützmacher, but has recently been restored to its original version. Boccherini also composed several guitar quintets, including the "Fandango", which was influenced by Spanish music. His biographer Elisabeth Le Guin noted among Boccherini's musical qualities "an astonishing repetitiveness, an affection for extended passages with fascinating textures but virtually no melodic line, an obsession with soft dynamics, a unique ear for sonority, and an unusually rich palette of introverted and mournful affects." Many of his other biographers and admirers see his music quite differently and in a much more appreciated light. Boccherini was born into a musical family in Lucca, Italy in 1743. He was the third child of Leopoldo Boccherini, a cellist and double-bass player, and the brother of Giovanni Gastone Boccherini, a poet and dancer who wrote librettos for Antonio Salieri and Joseph Haydn. Luigi received his first music lessons at age five by his father, who taught him cello, and then continued his studies at age nine with Abbé Vanucci, music director of a local cathedral, at San Martino. When his son reached thirteen, Leopoldo Boccherini sent him to study in Rome with Giovanni Battista Costanzi. In 1757 Luigi Boccherini and his father both went to Vienna, where the court employed them as musicians in the Burgtheater. In 1761 Boccherini went to Madrid, entering in 1770 the employ of Infante Luis Antonio of Spain (1727-1785), younger brother of King Charles III of Spain. There, Boccherini flourished under royal patronage, until one day when the King expressed his disapproval at a passage in a new trio, and ordered Boccherini to change it. The composer, no doubt irritated with this intrusion into his art, doubled the passage instead, which led to his immediate dismissal. Then he accompanied Don Luis (the Infante) to Arenas de San Pedro, a little town in the Gredos Mountains in Ávila; there and in the nearest town of Candeleda Boccherini wrote many of his most famous works. Later patrons included the French ambassador to Spain, Lucien Bonaparte (1775-1840), as well as King Friedrich Wilhelm II of Prussia (1744-1797), himself an amateur cellist, flautist, and avid supporter of the arts. Boccherini fell on hard times following the deaths of his Spanish patron (1785), his two wives (1785 and 1805), and his four daughters (1796, 1802 and 1804). He died in Madrid in 1805, survived by two sons. His bloodline continues to this day in Spain. His body lay buried in the Pontifical Basilica of St. Michael in Madrid until 1927, when Benito Mussolini had his remains repatriated and buried in the church of San Francesco in his native Lucca...
[From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]

Performer(s)

T

he first founding of the Quantz Collegium dates back to 1936, when the then 22-year-old flutist Ernst Friedrich Wilhelm Bodensohn (1914-2003) founded a chamber music ensemble and gave him the name of the "father" of the German flute history, Johann Joachim Quantz. The 2nd World War destroyed all further plans. After the war, Bodensohn became the first solo flutist of the newly founded SWR-Symphony-Orchestra in Baden-Baden and lived there with his family. In addition to his orchestral work under the conductors Hans Rosbaud (1895-1962) and Ernest Bour (1913-2001), he founded in the 1950s with colleagues once again the Quantz Collegium. After discovering the wonderful "Favorite Palace" near Rastatt in Germany, he succeeded with great commitment in 1957 for the first time to perform the "Festive Serenades at Rastatt Favorite Palace". The today since more than 60 years existing concert series is charcterized by one particular aspect: The less known composers of the Baroque and Classical periods should be made accessible to the public by confrontating them with the great, unforgettable masters of music history.

Furthermore, the historical ensemble of the namesake Johann Joachim Quantz at the court of Frederick II. is role model and obligation for a further focus on musical content: The performance of flute music from the Baroque and the Classical era. With these two programmatic weightings, it has now been possible to achieve an extraordinary variety and longevity with this concert series. An inner desire of the ensemble is the helping to preserve the music of the past in its great diversity and to offer it to the public with living performances. The concerts in the splendid "Sala Terrena" (Garden Hall) of the "Rastatt Favorite Palace" (Schloss Favorite Rastatt), combined with the "historical" costumes of the musicians, resulted in the today's special reputation of the concert series and its almost historical dimension.

Since 1982 Jochen Baier has been flutist and since 1991 flutist and leader of the ensemble. Under his direction, the ensemble has developed a wealth of programs through the variety of participating musicians and through intensive researches in libraries and archives. More than 2000 different compositions were performed during this time. During 540 concerts so far (until 2017), about 300 different composers were musically introduced and their curriculum vitae were presented in the historical context with text explanations. So far the concerts have been performed by more than 150 different musicians. Some of whom participated in one concert only. Others, as member of the ensemble, influenced the concert series with their activity through years or decades. View more information (in German) under: www.festliche-serenaden.de.

The Quantz Collegium

Jochen Baier ~ Flute & Artistic Leading
Boriana Baleff & Gundula Jaene ~ Violin
Agata Zieba ~ Viola
Gabriela Bradley & Jörg Rieger ~ Violoncello

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Brunetti: Sextet No. 5 in G Major

Track

Album Cover
EUR 2,85
Gaetano Brunetti (1744-1798):
Sextet No. 5 in G Major

"Sestetto No. 5"

For Flute, 2 Violins, Viola & 2 Cellos,
performed by the Quantz Collegium

A live recording from Rastatt Favorite Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 12:55
Digital Album [here: MP3, 320kB/sec.]
3 Tracks incl. Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Work(s) & Performance
Gaetano Brunetti

G

aetano Brunetti or Cayetano Brunetti (1744 in Fano - 16 December 1798 near Madrid) was a prolific Italian born composer active in Spain under kings Charles III and IV. Though he was musically influential at court and, to a lesser extent, throughout parts of western Europe, very little of his music was published during his lifetime, and not much more has been published since his death. The majority of Brunetti's output (451 pieces) consists of chamber music designed for small ensembles and symphonies for the royal chamber orchestra. His music, with its graceful melodies and periodic phrasing, respects early classical forms and conventions but also incorporates some more progressive and eclectic elements. The dearth of modern editions of Brunetti's compositions has helped limit the number of recordings of his work to a mere handful of releases...
[From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]

Performer(s)

T

he first founding of the Quantz Collegium dates back to 1936, when the then 22-year-old flutist Ernst Friedrich Wilhelm Bodensohn (1914-2003) founded a chamber music ensemble and gave him the name of the "father" of the German flute history, Johann Joachim Quantz. The 2nd World War destroyed all further plans. After the war, Bodensohn became the first solo flutist of the newly founded SWR-Symphony-Orchestra in Baden-Baden and lived there with his family. In addition to his orchestral work under the conductors Hans Rosbaud (1895-1962) and Ernest Bour (1913-2001), he founded in the 1950s with colleagues once again the Quantz Collegium. After discovering the wonderful "Favorite Palace" near Rastatt in Germany, he succeeded with great commitment in 1957 for the first time to perform the "Festive Serenades at Rastatt Favorite Palace". The today since more than 60 years existing concert series is charcterized by one particular aspect: The less known composers of the Baroque and Classical periods should be made accessible to the public by confrontating them with the great, unforgettable masters of music history.

Furthermore, the historical ensemble of the namesake Johann Joachim Quantz at the court of Frederick II. is role model and obligation for a further focus on musical content: The performance of flute music from the Baroque and the Classical era. With these two programmatic weightings, it has now been possible to achieve an extraordinary variety and longevity with this concert series. An inner desire of the ensemble is the helping to preserve the music of the past in its great diversity and to offer it to the public with living performances. The concerts in the splendid "Sala Terrena" (Garden Hall) of the "Rastatt Favorite Palace" (Schloss Favorite Rastatt), combined with the "historical" costumes of the musicians, resulted in the today's special reputation of the concert series and its almost historical dimension.

Since 1982 Jochen Baier has been flutist and since 1991 flutist and leader of the ensemble. Under his direction, the ensemble has developed a wealth of programs through the variety of participating musicians and through intensive researches in libraries and archives. More than 2000 different compositions were performed during this time. During 540 concerts so far (until 2017), about 300 different composers were musically introduced and their curriculum vitae were presented in the historical context with text explanations. So far the concerts have been performed by more than 150 different musicians. Some of whom participated in one concert only. Others, as member of the ensemble, influenced the concert series with their activity through years or decades. View more information (in German) under: www.festliche-serenaden.de.

The Quantz Collegium

Jochen Baier ~ Flute & Artistic Leading
Boriana Baleff & Gundula Jaene ~ Violin
Agata Zieba ~ Viola
Gabriela Bradley & Jörg Rieger ~ Violoncello

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Boccherini: Sextet No. 3 in A Major

Track

Album Cover
EUR 2,85
Luigi Boccherini (1743-1805):
Sextet No. 3 in A Major

G. 463 · "Sextuor No. 3"

For Flute, 2 Violins, Viola & 2 Cellos,
performed by the Quantz Collegium

A live recording from Rastatt Favorite Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 13:04
Digital Album [here: MP3, 320kB/sec.]
3 Tracks incl. Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Work(s) & Performance
Luigi Boccherini

R

idolfo Luigi Boccherini (February 19, 1743 - May 28, 1805) was an Italian composer and cellist of the Classical era whose music retained a courtly and galante style even while he matured somewhat apart from the major European musical centers. He is best known for a minuet from his String Quintet in E, Op. 11, No. 5 (G 275), and the Cello Concerto in B flat major (G 482). The latter work was long known in the heavily altered version by German cellist and prolific arranger Friedrich Grützmacher, but has recently been restored to its original version. Boccherini also composed several guitar quintets, including the "Fandango", which was influenced by Spanish music. His biographer Elisabeth Le Guin noted among Boccherini's musical qualities "an astonishing repetitiveness, an affection for extended passages with fascinating textures but virtually no melodic line, an obsession with soft dynamics, a unique ear for sonority, and an unusually rich palette of introverted and mournful affects." Many of his other biographers and admirers see his music quite differently and in a much more appreciated light. Boccherini was born into a musical family in Lucca, Italy in 1743. He was the third child of Leopoldo Boccherini, a cellist and double-bass player, and the brother of Giovanni Gastone Boccherini, a poet and dancer who wrote librettos for Antonio Salieri and Joseph Haydn. Luigi received his first music lessons at age five by his father, who taught him cello, and then continued his studies at age nine with Abbé Vanucci, music director of a local cathedral, at San Martino. When his son reached thirteen, Leopoldo Boccherini sent him to study in Rome with Giovanni Battista Costanzi. In 1757 Luigi Boccherini and his father both went to Vienna, where the court employed them as musicians in the Burgtheater. In 1761 Boccherini went to Madrid, entering in 1770 the employ of Infante Luis Antonio of Spain (1727-1785), younger brother of King Charles III of Spain. There, Boccherini flourished under royal patronage, until one day when the King expressed his disapproval at a passage in a new trio, and ordered Boccherini to change it. The composer, no doubt irritated with this intrusion into his art, doubled the passage instead, which led to his immediate dismissal. Then he accompanied Don Luis (the Infante) to Arenas de San Pedro, a little town in the Gredos Mountains in Ávila; there and in the nearest town of Candeleda Boccherini wrote many of his most famous works. Later patrons included the French ambassador to Spain, Lucien Bonaparte (1775-1840), as well as King Friedrich Wilhelm II of Prussia (1744-1797), himself an amateur cellist, flautist, and avid supporter of the arts. Boccherini fell on hard times following the deaths of his Spanish patron (1785), his two wives (1785 and 1805), and his four daughters (1796, 1802 and 1804). He died in Madrid in 1805, survived by two sons. His bloodline continues to this day in Spain. His body lay buried in the Pontifical Basilica of St. Michael in Madrid until 1927, when Benito Mussolini had his remains repatriated and buried in the church of San Francesco in his native Lucca...
[From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]

Performer(s)

T

he first founding of the Quantz Collegium dates back to 1936, when the then 22-year-old flutist Ernst Friedrich Wilhelm Bodensohn (1914-2003) founded a chamber music ensemble and gave him the name of the "father" of the German flute history, Johann Joachim Quantz. The 2nd World War destroyed all further plans. After the war, Bodensohn became the first solo flutist of the newly founded SWR-Symphony-Orchestra in Baden-Baden and lived there with his family. In addition to his orchestral work under the conductors Hans Rosbaud (1895-1962) and Ernest Bour (1913-2001), he founded in the 1950s with colleagues once again the Quantz Collegium. After discovering the wonderful "Favorite Palace" near Rastatt in Germany, he succeeded with great commitment in 1957 for the first time to perform the "Festive Serenades at Rastatt Favorite Palace". The today since more than 60 years existing concert series is charcterized by one particular aspect: The less known composers of the Baroque and Classical periods should be made accessible to the public by confrontating them with the great, unforgettable masters of music history.

Furthermore, the historical ensemble of the namesake Johann Joachim Quantz at the court of Frederick II. is role model and obligation for a further focus on musical content: The performance of flute music from the Baroque and the Classical era. With these two programmatic weightings, it has now been possible to achieve an extraordinary variety and longevity with this concert series. An inner desire of the ensemble is the helping to preserve the music of the past in its great diversity and to offer it to the public with living performances. The concerts in the splendid "Sala Terrena" (Garden Hall) of the "Rastatt Favorite Palace" (Schloss Favorite Rastatt), combined with the "historical" costumes of the musicians, resulted in the today's special reputation of the concert series and its almost historical dimension.

Since 1982 Jochen Baier has been flutist and since 1991 flutist and leader of the ensemble. Under his direction, the ensemble has developed a wealth of programs through the variety of participating musicians and through intensive researches in libraries and archives. More than 2000 different compositions were performed during this time. During 540 concerts so far (until 2017), about 300 different composers were musically introduced and their curriculum vitae were presented in the historical context with text explanations. So far the concerts have been performed by more than 150 different musicians. Some of whom participated in one concert only. Others, as member of the ensemble, influenced the concert series with their activity through years or decades. View more information (in German) under: www.festliche-serenaden.de.

The Quantz Collegium

Jochen Baier ~ Flute & Artistic Leading
Boriana Baleff & Gundula Jaene ~ Violin
Agata Zieba ~ Viola
Gabriela Bradley & Jörg Rieger ~ Violoncello

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Boccherini: Sextet No. 2 in F Major

Track

Album Cover
EUR 4,75
Luigi Boccherini (1743-1805):
Sextet No. 2 in F Major

G. 462 · "Sextuor No. 2"

For Flute, 2 Violins, Viola & 2 Cellos,
performed by the Quantz Collegium

A live recording from Rastatt Favorite Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 28:19
Digital Album [here: MP3, 320kB/sec.]
4 Tracks incl. Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Work(s) & Performance
Luigi Boccherini

R

idolfo Luigi Boccherini (February 19, 1743 - May 28, 1805) was an Italian composer and cellist of the Classical era whose music retained a courtly and galante style even while he matured somewhat apart from the major European musical centers. He is best known for a minuet from his String Quintet in E, Op. 11, No. 5 (G 275), and the Cello Concerto in B flat major (G 482). The latter work was long known in the heavily altered version by German cellist and prolific arranger Friedrich Grützmacher, but has recently been restored to its original version. Boccherini also composed several guitar quintets, including the "Fandango", which was influenced by Spanish music. His biographer Elisabeth Le Guin noted among Boccherini's musical qualities "an astonishing repetitiveness, an affection for extended passages with fascinating textures but virtually no melodic line, an obsession with soft dynamics, a unique ear for sonority, and an unusually rich palette of introverted and mournful affects." Many of his other biographers and admirers see his music quite differently and in a much more appreciated light. Boccherini was born into a musical family in Lucca, Italy in 1743. He was the third child of Leopoldo Boccherini, a cellist and double-bass player, and the brother of Giovanni Gastone Boccherini, a poet and dancer who wrote librettos for Antonio Salieri and Joseph Haydn. Luigi received his first music lessons at age five by his father, who taught him cello, and then continued his studies at age nine with Abbé Vanucci, music director of a local cathedral, at San Martino. When his son reached thirteen, Leopoldo Boccherini sent him to study in Rome with Giovanni Battista Costanzi. In 1757 Luigi Boccherini and his father both went to Vienna, where the court employed them as musicians in the Burgtheater. In 1761 Boccherini went to Madrid, entering in 1770 the employ of Infante Luis Antonio of Spain (1727-1785), younger brother of King Charles III of Spain. There, Boccherini flourished under royal patronage, until one day when the King expressed his disapproval at a passage in a new trio, and ordered Boccherini to change it. The composer, no doubt irritated with this intrusion into his art, doubled the passage instead, which led to his immediate dismissal. Then he accompanied Don Luis (the Infante) to Arenas de San Pedro, a little town in the Gredos Mountains in Ávila; there and in the nearest town of Candeleda Boccherini wrote many of his most famous works. Later patrons included the French ambassador to Spain, Lucien Bonaparte (1775-1840), as well as King Friedrich Wilhelm II of Prussia (1744-1797), himself an amateur cellist, flautist, and avid supporter of the arts. Boccherini fell on hard times following the deaths of his Spanish patron (1785), his two wives (1785 and 1805), and his four daughters (1796, 1802 and 1804). He died in Madrid in 1805, survived by two sons. His bloodline continues to this day in Spain. His body lay buried in the Pontifical Basilica of St. Michael in Madrid until 1927, when Benito Mussolini had his remains repatriated and buried in the church of San Francesco in his native Lucca...
[From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]

Performer(s)

T

he first founding of the Quantz Collegium dates back to 1936, when the then 22-year-old flutist Ernst Friedrich Wilhelm Bodensohn (1914-2003) founded a chamber music ensemble and gave him the name of the "father" of the German flute history, Johann Joachim Quantz. The 2nd World War destroyed all further plans. After the war, Bodensohn became the first solo flutist of the newly founded SWR-Symphony-Orchestra in Baden-Baden and lived there with his family. In addition to his orchestral work under the conductors Hans Rosbaud (1895-1962) and Ernest Bour (1913-2001), he founded in the 1950s with colleagues once again the Quantz Collegium. After discovering the wonderful "Favorite Palace" near Rastatt in Germany, he succeeded with great commitment in 1957 for the first time to perform the "Festive Serenades at Rastatt Favorite Palace". The today since more than 60 years existing concert series is charcterized by one particular aspect: The less known composers of the Baroque and Classical periods should be made accessible to the public by confrontating them with the great, unforgettable masters of music history.

Furthermore, the historical ensemble of the namesake Johann Joachim Quantz at the court of Frederick II. is role model and obligation for a further focus on musical content: The performance of flute music from the Baroque and the Classical era. With these two programmatic weightings, it has now been possible to achieve an extraordinary variety and longevity with this concert series. An inner desire of the ensemble is the helping to preserve the music of the past in its great diversity and to offer it to the public with living performances. The concerts in the splendid "Sala Terrena" (Garden Hall) of the "Rastatt Favorite Palace" (Schloss Favorite Rastatt), combined with the "historical" costumes of the musicians, resulted in the today's special reputation of the concert series and its almost historical dimension.

Since 1982 Jochen Baier has been flutist and since 1991 flutist and leader of the ensemble. Under his direction, the ensemble has developed a wealth of programs through the variety of participating musicians and through intensive researches in libraries and archives. More than 2000 different compositions were performed during this time. During 540 concerts so far (until 2017), about 300 different composers were musically introduced and their curriculum vitae were presented in the historical context with text explanations. So far the concerts have been performed by more than 150 different musicians. Some of whom participated in one concert only. Others, as member of the ensemble, influenced the concert series with their activity through years or decades. View more information (in German) under: www.festliche-serenaden.de.

The Quantz Collegium

Jochen Baier ~ Flute & Artistic Leading
Boriana Baleff & Gundula Jaene ~ Violin
Agata Zieba ~ Viola
Gabriela Bradley & Jörg Rieger ~ Violoncello

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Brunetti: Sextet No. 2 in A Major

Track

Album Cover
EUR 2,85
Gaetano Brunetti (1744-1798):
Sextet No. 2 in A Major

"Sestetto No. 2"

For Flute, 2 Violins, Viola & 2 Cellos,
performed by the Quantz Collegium

A live recording from Rastatt Favorite Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 11:48
Digital Album [here: MP3, 320kB/sec.]
3 Tracks incl. Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Work(s) & Performance
Gaetano Brunetti

G

aetano Brunetti or Cayetano Brunetti (1744 in Fano - 16 December 1798 near Madrid) was a prolific Italian born composer active in Spain under kings Charles III and IV. Though he was musically influential at court and, to a lesser extent, throughout parts of western Europe, very little of his music was published during his lifetime, and not much more has been published since his death. The majority of Brunetti's output (451 pieces) consists of chamber music designed for small ensembles and symphonies for the royal chamber orchestra. His music, with its graceful melodies and periodic phrasing, respects early classical forms and conventions but also incorporates some more progressive and eclectic elements. The dearth of modern editions of Brunetti's compositions has helped limit the number of recordings of his work to a mere handful of releases...
[From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]

Performer(s)

T

he first founding of the Quantz Collegium dates back to 1936, when the then 22-year-old flutist Ernst Friedrich Wilhelm Bodensohn (1914-2003) founded a chamber music ensemble and gave him the name of the "father" of the German flute history, Johann Joachim Quantz. The 2nd World War destroyed all further plans. After the war, Bodensohn became the first solo flutist of the newly founded SWR-Symphony-Orchestra in Baden-Baden and lived there with his family. In addition to his orchestral work under the conductors Hans Rosbaud (1895-1962) and Ernest Bour (1913-2001), he founded in the 1950s with colleagues once again the Quantz Collegium. After discovering the wonderful "Favorite Palace" near Rastatt in Germany, he succeeded with great commitment in 1957 for the first time to perform the "Festive Serenades at Rastatt Favorite Palace". The today since more than 60 years existing concert series is charcterized by one particular aspect: The less known composers of the Baroque and Classical periods should be made accessible to the public by confrontating them with the great, unforgettable masters of music history.

Furthermore, the historical ensemble of the namesake Johann Joachim Quantz at the court of Frederick II. is role model and obligation for a further focus on musical content: The performance of flute music from the Baroque and the Classical era. With these two programmatic weightings, it has now been possible to achieve an extraordinary variety and longevity with this concert series. An inner desire of the ensemble is the helping to preserve the music of the past in its great diversity and to offer it to the public with living performances. The concerts in the splendid "Sala Terrena" (Garden Hall) of the "Rastatt Favorite Palace" (Schloss Favorite Rastatt), combined with the "historical" costumes of the musicians, resulted in the today's special reputation of the concert series and its almost historical dimension.

Since 1982 Jochen Baier has been flutist and since 1991 flutist and leader of the ensemble. Under his direction, the ensemble has developed a wealth of programs through the variety of participating musicians and through intensive researches in libraries and archives. More than 2000 different compositions were performed during this time. During 540 concerts so far (until 2017), about 300 different composers were musically introduced and their curriculum vitae were presented in the historical context with text explanations. So far the concerts have been performed by more than 150 different musicians. Some of whom participated in one concert only. Others, as member of the ensemble, influenced the concert series with their activity through years or decades. View more information (in German) under: www.festliche-serenaden.de.

The Quantz Collegium

Jochen Baier ~ Flute & Artistic Leading
Boriana Baleff & Gundula Jaene ~ Violin
Agata Zieba ~ Viola
Gabriela Bradley & Jörg Rieger ~ Violoncello

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Santa Claus Is Coming To Town

Cover: Santa Claus Is Coming To Town
Backcover: Santa Claus Is Coming To Town
EUR 22,00
CD
New Orleans Jazz Band of Cologne
Santa Claus Is Coming To Town

A Swinging Christmas Concert,
arranged and performed by the New Orleans Jazz Band of Cologne

Santa Claus Is Coming To Town ~ Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas
Here Comes Santa Claus ~ God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen
Christmas Time In New Orleans ~ Christmas Song
Frosty The Snow Man ~ Winter Wonderland
You're All I Want For Christmas ~ Mary's Boy Child
At The Christmas Ball ~ Zat You, Santa Claus ~ Blue Christmas

A live recording from Bad Homburg Castle in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: c. 66 Minutes

Previews

Performer(s)

The New Orleans Jazz Band of Cologne

Bruno van Acoleyen · Trumpet & Vocals ~ Bart Brouwer · Trombone & Vocals
John Defferary · Clarinet & Vocals ~ Dominik Dötsch · Piano (Guest)
Hans-Martin "Büli" Schöning · Banjo & Guitar ~ Markus "Benny" Daniels · Bass
Reinhard Küpper · Drums & Leading

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Works, Movements & Tracklist

1. Santa Claus Is Coming To Town [7:01]
Written by John Frederick Coots

2. Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas [4:16]
Written by Hugh Martin & Ralph Blane

3. Here Comes Santa Claus [4:48]
Written by Gene Autry & Oakley Haldeman

4. God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen [4:23]
Traditional

5. Christmas Time In New Orleans [7:34]
Written by Dick Sherman & Joe Van Winkle
Vocals: Bruno van Acoleyen

6. Christmas Song [5:21]
Written by Bob Wells & Mel Tormé

7. Frosty The Snow Man [4:50]
Written by Walter Rollins & Steve Nelson

8. Winter Wonderland [5:58]
Written by Felix Bernard · Lyrics by Richard Bernhard Smith
Vocals: Bart Brouwer

9. You're All I Want for Christmas [4:29]
Written by Seger Ellis & Glen T. Moore
Vocals: John Defferary

10. Mary's Boy Child [3:22]
Written by Jester Joseph Hairston

11. At The Christmas Ball [4:44]
Written by Butch Thompson & F. W. Longshaw
Vocals: Bruno van Acoleyen

12. Zat You, Santa Claus [4:32]
Written by Jack Fox
Vocals: Bruno van Acoleyen

13. Blue Christmas [5:26]
Written by Billy Hayes & Jay W. Johnson
Vocals: John Defferary


A live recording from Bad Homburg Castle in Germany,
documented, produced & released
by Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler
in cooperation with Volker Northoff
Concert Date: December 9, 2018
Sound Engineer: Andreas Otto Grimminger
Production & Mastering: Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler
Photography, Artwork & Coverdesign: Josef-Stefan Kindler

Review

Recommended by the Downbeat Magazine in the 'Holiday Gift Guide 2019'

The German, Belgian and Dutch members of the New Orleans Jazz Band of Cologne find their passion in New Orleans traditional jazz. "Santa Claus Is Coming To Town" (K&K Verlagsanstalt 134; 66:52) maintains the level of energy necessary to keep nostalgia away on this live album. A round-robin of decent solos is the order of the day.

Downbeat Magazine, November 2019

Longplay Music Albums & CDs:

Longplay-Musikalben & CDs:

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Künstler, Reihen & Komponisten:

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Epochen, Specials & Formate:

Corelli: Concerto Grosso in G Minor, Op. 6 No. 8 "Christmas Concerto"

Track

Cover
EUR 5,70
Arcangelo Corelli (1653-1713):
Concerto Grosso in G Minor, Op. 6 No. 8

"Christmas Concerto"

for Alto Recorder, Violin & Basso Continuo,
performed according to the traditions of the time
by the Ensemble Nel Dolce:
Stephanie Buyken (Alto Recorder) · Olga Piskorz (Violin)
Harm Meiners (Cello) · Flóra Fábri (Harpsichord)

A live recording from Bad Homburg Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 13:35
Digital Album [here: MP3/320kBit/sec.]
6 Tracks · Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Keller: Trio Sonata in B-Flat Major

Track

Cover
EUR 3,80
Gottfried Keller (1650-1704):
Trio Sonata in B-Flat Major

for Recorder, Violin & Basso Continuo,
performed according to the traditions of the time
by the Ensemble Nel Dolce:
Stephanie Buyken (Recorder) · Olga Piskorz (Violin)
Harm Meiners (Cello) · Flóra Fábri (Harpsichord)

A live recording from Bad Homburg Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 5:32
Digital Album [here: MP3/320kBit/sec.]
4 Tracks · Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Porpora: Cello Sonata in C Major

Track

Cover
EUR 3,80
Nicola Antonio Porpora (1686-1768):
Cello Sonata in C Major

for Cello, Violin & Basso Continuo,
performed according to the traditions of the time
by the Ensemble Nel Dolce:
Harm Meiners (Cello) · Olga Piskorz (Violin) · Flóra Fábri (Harpsichord)

A live recording from Bad Homburg Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 7:58
Digital Album [here: MP3/320kBit/sec.]
4 Tracks · Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Work(s) & Performance

N

icola Antonio Porpora (17 August 1686 - 3 March 1768) was an Italian composer and teacher of singing of the Baroque era, whose most famous singing students were the castrati Farinelli and Caffarelli. Other students included composers Matteo Capranica and Joseph Haydn. Porpora was born in Naples. He graduated from the music conservatory Poveri di Gesù Cristo of his native city, where the civic opera scene was dominated by Alessandro Scarlatti. Porpora's first opera, Agrippina, was successfully performed at the Neapolitan court in 1708. His second, Berenice, was performed at Rome. In a long career, he followed these up by many further operas, supported as maestro di cappella in the households of aristocratic patrons, such as the commander of military forces at Naples, prince Philip of Hesse-Darmstadt, or of the Portuguese ambassador at Rome, for composing operas alone did not yet make a viable career. However, his enduring fame rests chiefly upon his unequalled power of teaching singing. At the Neapolitan Conservatorio di Sant'Onofrio and with the Poveri di Gesù Cristo he trained Farinelli, Caffarelli, Salimbeni, and other celebrated vocalists, during the period 1715 to 1721. In 1720 and 1721 he wrote two serenades to libretti by a gifted young poet, Metastasio, the beginning of a long, though interrupted, collaboration. In 1722 his operatic successes encouraged him to lay down his conservatory commitments. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Handel: Trio Sonata in F Major, Op. 2 No. 4, HWV 389

Track

Cover
EUR 4,75
George Frideric Handel (1685‐1759):
Trio Sonata in F Major

Op. 2 No. 4, HWV 389

for Alto Recorder, Violin & Basso Continuo,
performed according to the traditions of the time
by the Ensemble Nel Dolce:
Stephanie Buyken (Alto Recorder) · Olga Piskorz (Violin)
Harm Meiners (Cello) · Flóra Fábri (Harpsichord)

A live recording from Bad Homburg Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 11:32
Digital Album [here: MP3/320kBit/sec.]
5 Tracks · Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

GRAUPNER: Concerto for Flute & Viola in D Minor, GWV 725

Track

Cover
EUR 3,80
Christoph Graupner (1683-1760):
Concerto for Flute & Viola

in D Minor, GWV 725

Performed by the Quantz Collegium
feat. Jochen Baier (Flute) & Kilian Ziegler (Viola)

A live recording from Rastatt Favorite Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 16:13
Digital Album [here: MP3/320kBit/sec.]
4 Tracks · Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Work(s) & Performance

C

hristoph Graupner (13 January 1683 in Kirchberg - 10 May 1760 in Darmstadt) was a German harpsichordist and composer of high Baroque music who was a contemporary of Johann Sebastian Bach, Georg Philipp Telemann and George Frideric Handel. Born in Hartmannsdorf near Kirchberg in Saxony, Graupner received his first musical instruction from his uncle, an organist named Nicolaus Kuester. Graupner went to the University of Leipzig where he studied law (as did many composers of the time) and then completed his musical studies with Johann Kuhnau, the cantor of the Thomasschule (St. Thomas School). In 1705 Graupner left Leipzig to play the harpsichord in the orchestra of the Hamburg Opera under the direction of Reinhard Keiser, alongside George Frideric Handel, then a young violinist. In addition to playing the harpsichord, Graupner composed six operas in Hamburg, some of them in collaboration with Keiser, a popular composer of operas in Germany. In 1709 Graupner accepted a post at the court of Hesse-Darmstadt and in 1711 became the court orchestra's Hofkapellmeister (court chapel master). Graupner spent the rest of his career at the court in Hesse-Darmstadt, where his primary responsibilities were to provide music for the court chapel. He wrote music for nearly half a century, from 1709 to 1754, when he became blind. He died six years later... [From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]

Performer(s)

T

he first founding of the Quantz Collegium dates back to 1936, when the then 22-year-old flutist Ernst Friedrich Wilhelm Bodensohn (1914-2003) founded a chamber music ensemble and gave him the name of the "father" of the German flute history, Johann Joachim Quantz. The 2nd World War destroyed all further plans. After the war, Bodensohn became the first solo flutist of the newly founded SWR-Symphony-Orchestra in Baden-Baden and lived there with his family. In addition to his orchestral work under the conductors Hans Rosbaud (1895-1962) and Ernest Bour (1913-2001), he founded in the 1950s with colleagues once again the Quantz Collegium. After discovering the wonderful "Favorite Palace" near Rastatt in Germany, he succeeded with great commitment in 1957 for the first time to perform the "Festive Serenades at Rastatt Favorite Palace". The today since more than 60 years existing concert series is charcterized by one particular aspect: The less known composers of the Baroque and Classical periods should be made accessible to the public by confrontating them with the great, unforgettable masters of music history.

Quantz Collegium

Jochen Baier ~ Flute & Artistic Leading
Boriana Baleff & Gundula Jaene ~ Violin · Agata Zieba & Kilian Ziegler ~ Viola
Regina Wilke ~ Cello · Slobodan Jovanovic ~ Harpsichord

Furthermore, the historical ensemble of the namesake Johann Joachim Quantz at the court of Frederick II. is role model and obligation for a further focus on musical content: The performance of flute music from the Baroque and the Classical era. With these two programmatic weightings, it has now been possible to achieve an extraordinary variety and longevity with this concert series. An inner desire of the ensemble is the helping to preserve the music of the past in its great diversity and to offer it to the public with living performances. The concerts in the splendid "Sala Terrena" (Garden Hall) of the "Rastatt Favorite Palace" (Schloss Favorite Rastatt), combined with the "historical" costumes of the musicians, resulted in the today's special reputation of the concert series and its almost historical dimension.
Since 1982 Jochen Baier has been flutist and since 1991 flutist and leader of the ensemble. Under his direction, the ensemble has developed a wealth of programs through the variety of participating musicians and through intensive researches in libraries and archives. More than 2000 different compositions were performed during this time. During 540 concerts so far (until 2017), about 300 different composers were musically introduced and their curriculum vitae were presented in the historical context with text explanations. So far the concerts have been performed by more than 150 different musicians. Some of whom participated in one concert only. Others, as member of the ensemble, influenced the concert series with their activity through years or decades. View more information (in German) under: www.festliche-serenaden.de.

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

TELEMANN: Viola Concerto in G Major, TWV 51:G9

Track

Cover
EUR 3,80
Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767):
Viola Concerto in G Major

TWV 51:G9

Performed by the Quantz Collegium
feat. Kilian Ziegler (Viola)

A live recording from Rastatt Favorite Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 13:12
Digital Album [here: MP3/320kBit/sec.]
4 Tracks · Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Work(s) & Performance
Antonio Vivaldi

O

f Georg Philipp Telemann's surviving concertos, his Viola Concerto in G major, TWV 51:G9 is among his most famous, and still regularly performed today. It is the first known concerto for viola and was written circa 1716–1721. It consists of four movements:
Largo: A mellow movement with long notes. Written in 3/2, with many dotted quarter and eighth note slurs, and is in the key of G. Usually is played with vibrato. Some performers choose to add significant ornamentation to this very simple movement.
Allegro: Most played movement. Written in 4/4 and in the key of G. The melody begins with a distinctive syncopated figure which is also used independently later in the movement.
Andante: A slow, mellow movement in the relative minor and largely on the upper strings of the instrument.
Presto: A fast, exciting movement in the tonic key.
The fast movements contain very few slurs, and many performers' editions include slurring suggestions, often indistinguishable from markings contained in the original. The performer is encouraged to invent a varied pattern of slurs which fits the shape of each phrase.
The slow movements both give the option of a cadenza.
A typical performance lasts about 14 minutes.

From Wikipedia, the free rncyclopedia

Performer(s)

T

he first founding of the Quantz Collegium dates back to 1936, when the then 22-year-old flutist Ernst Friedrich Wilhelm Bodensohn (1914-2003) founded a chamber music ensemble and gave him the name of the "father" of the German flute history, Johann Joachim Quantz. The 2nd World War destroyed all further plans. After the war, Bodensohn became the first solo flutist of the newly founded SWR-Symphony-Orchestra in Baden-Baden and lived there with his family. In addition to his orchestral work under the conductors Hans Rosbaud (1895-1962) and Ernest Bour (1913-2001), he founded in the 1950s with colleagues once again the Quantz Collegium. After discovering the wonderful "Favorite Palace" near Rastatt in Germany, he succeeded with great commitment in 1957 for the first time to perform the "Festive Serenades at Rastatt Favorite Palace". The today since more than 60 years existing concert series is charcterized by one particular aspect: The less known composers of the Baroque and Classical periods should be made accessible to the public by confrontating them with the great, unforgettable masters of music history.

Quantz Collegium

Jochen Baier ~ Flute & Artistic Leading
Boriana Baleff & Gundula Jaene ~ Violin · Agata Zieba & Kilian Ziegler ~ Viola
Regina Wilke ~ Cello · Slobodan Jovanovic ~ Harpsichord

Furthermore, the historical ensemble of the namesake Johann Joachim Quantz at the court of Frederick II. is role model and obligation for a further focus on musical content: The performance of flute music from the Baroque and the Classical era. With these two programmatic weightings, it has now been possible to achieve an extraordinary variety and longevity with this concert series. An inner desire of the ensemble is the helping to preserve the music of the past in its great diversity and to offer it to the public with living performances. The concerts in the splendid "Sala Terrena" (Garden Hall) of the "Rastatt Favorite Palace" (Schloss Favorite Rastatt), combined with the "historical" costumes of the musicians, resulted in the today's special reputation of the concert series and its almost historical dimension.
Since 1982 Jochen Baier has been flutist and since 1991 flutist and leader of the ensemble. Under his direction, the ensemble has developed a wealth of programs through the variety of participating musicians and through intensive researches in libraries and archives. More than 2000 different compositions were performed during this time. During 540 concerts so far (until 2017), about 300 different composers were musically introduced and their curriculum vitae were presented in the historical context with text explanations. So far the concerts have been performed by more than 150 different musicians. Some of whom participated in one concert only. Others, as member of the ensemble, influenced the concert series with their activity through years or decades. View more information (in German) under: www.festliche-serenaden.de.

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

BENDA: Flute Concerto in G Major, Op. 4 No. 1

Track

Cover
EUR 3,80
Friedrich Wilhelm Heinrich Benda:
Flute Concerto

in G Major, Op. 4 No. 1

Performed by the Quantz Collegium
feat. Jochen Baier (Flute)

A live recording from Rastatt Favorite Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 17:30
Digital Album [here: MP3/320kBit/sec.]
3 Tracks · Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Work(s) & Performance

F

riedrich Wilhelm Heinrich Benda (15 July 1745 in Potsdam - 19 June 1814 in Potsdam) was a German violinist, pianist and composer. Benda was the son of violin virtuoso and composer Franz Benda, from whom he received his first musical lessons. Later he studied music theory and composition with Johann Kirnberger in Berlin. In addition to his compositional achievements, he was an accomplished pianist and violinist. In the years 1765–1810, Benda was a chamber musician at the Prussian Court in Potsdam where his compositions found much acceptance. Benda composed concertos, operas, and chamber Music... [From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]

Performer(s)

T

he first founding of the Quantz Collegium dates back to 1936, when the then 22-year-old flutist Ernst Friedrich Wilhelm Bodensohn (1914-2003) founded a chamber music ensemble and gave him the name of the "father" of the German flute history, Johann Joachim Quantz. The 2nd World War destroyed all further plans. After the war, Bodensohn became the first solo flutist of the newly founded SWR-Symphony-Orchestra in Baden-Baden and lived there with his family. In addition to his orchestral work under the conductors Hans Rosbaud (1895-1962) and Ernest Bour (1913-2001), he founded in the 1950s with colleagues once again the Quantz Collegium. After discovering the wonderful "Favorite Palace" near Rastatt in Germany, he succeeded with great commitment in 1957 for the first time to perform the "Festive Serenades at Rastatt Favorite Palace". The today since more than 60 years existing concert series is charcterized by one particular aspect: The less known composers of the Baroque and Classical periods should be made accessible to the public by confrontating them with the great, unforgettable masters of music history.

Quantz Collegium

Jochen Baier ~ Flute & Artistic Leading
Boriana Baleff & Gundula Jaene ~ Violin · Agata Zieba & Kilian Ziegler ~ Viola
Regina Wilke ~ Cello · Slobodan Jovanovic ~ Harpsichord

Furthermore, the historical ensemble of the namesake Johann Joachim Quantz at the court of Frederick II. is role model and obligation for a further focus on musical content: The performance of flute music from the Baroque and the Classical era. With these two programmatic weightings, it has now been possible to achieve an extraordinary variety and longevity with this concert series. An inner desire of the ensemble is the helping to preserve the music of the past in its great diversity and to offer it to the public with living performances. The concerts in the splendid "Sala Terrena" (Garden Hall) of the "Rastatt Favorite Palace" (Schloss Favorite Rastatt), combined with the "historical" costumes of the musicians, resulted in the today's special reputation of the concert series and its almost historical dimension.
Since 1982 Jochen Baier has been flutist and since 1991 flutist and leader of the ensemble. Under his direction, the ensemble has developed a wealth of programs through the variety of participating musicians and through intensive researches in libraries and archives. More than 2000 different compositions were performed during this time. During 540 concerts so far (until 2017), about 300 different composers were musically introduced and their curriculum vitae were presented in the historical context with text explanations. So far the concerts have been performed by more than 150 different musicians. Some of whom participated in one concert only. Others, as member of the ensemble, influenced the concert series with their activity through years or decades. View more information (in German) under: www.festliche-serenaden.de.

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

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Künstler, Reihen & Komponisten:

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Release Type: Work Albums

GRAUPNER: Viola Concerto in D Major, GWV 314

Track

Cover
EUR 2,85
Christoph Graupner (1683-1760):
Viola Concerto in D Major

GWV 314

Performed by the Quantz Collegium
feat. Agata Zieba (Viola)

A live recording from Rastatt Favorite Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 11:02
Digital Album [here: MP3/320kBit/sec.]
3 Tracks · Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Work(s) & Performance

C

hristoph Graupner (13 January 1683 in Kirchberg - 10 May 1760 in Darmstadt) was a German harpsichordist and composer of high Baroque music who was a contemporary of Johann Sebastian Bach, Georg Philipp Telemann and George Frideric Handel. Born in Hartmannsdorf near Kirchberg in Saxony, Graupner received his first musical instruction from his uncle, an organist named Nicolaus Kuester. Graupner went to the University of Leipzig where he studied law (as did many composers of the time) and then completed his musical studies with Johann Kuhnau, the cantor of the Thomasschule (St. Thomas School). In 1705 Graupner left Leipzig to play the harpsichord in the orchestra of the Hamburg Opera under the direction of Reinhard Keiser, alongside George Frideric Handel, then a young violinist. In addition to playing the harpsichord, Graupner composed six operas in Hamburg, some of them in collaboration with Keiser, a popular composer of operas in Germany. In 1709 Graupner accepted a post at the court of Hesse-Darmstadt and in 1711 became the court orchestra's Hofkapellmeister (court chapel master). Graupner spent the rest of his career at the court in Hesse-Darmstadt, where his primary responsibilities were to provide music for the court chapel. He wrote music for nearly half a century, from 1709 to 1754, when he became blind. He died six years later... [From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]

Performer(s)

T

he first founding of the Quantz Collegium dates back to 1936, when the then 22-year-old flutist Ernst Friedrich Wilhelm Bodensohn (1914-2003) founded a chamber music ensemble and gave him the name of the "father" of the German flute history, Johann Joachim Quantz. The 2nd World War destroyed all further plans. After the war, Bodensohn became the first solo flutist of the newly founded SWR-Symphony-Orchestra in Baden-Baden and lived there with his family. In addition to his orchestral work under the conductors Hans Rosbaud (1895-1962) and Ernest Bour (1913-2001), he founded in the 1950s with colleagues once again the Quantz Collegium. After discovering the wonderful "Favorite Palace" near Rastatt in Germany, he succeeded with great commitment in 1957 for the first time to perform the "Festive Serenades at Rastatt Favorite Palace". The today since more than 60 years existing concert series is charcterized by one particular aspect: The less known composers of the Baroque and Classical periods should be made accessible to the public by confrontating them with the great, unforgettable masters of music history.

Quantz Collegium

Jochen Baier ~ Flute & Artistic Leading
Boriana Baleff & Gundula Jaene ~ Violin · Agata Zieba & Kilian Ziegler ~ Viola
Regina Wilke ~ Cello · Slobodan Jovanovic ~ Harpsichord

Furthermore, the historical ensemble of the namesake Johann Joachim Quantz at the court of Frederick II. is role model and obligation for a further focus on musical content: The performance of flute music from the Baroque and the Classical era. With these two programmatic weightings, it has now been possible to achieve an extraordinary variety and longevity with this concert series. An inner desire of the ensemble is the helping to preserve the music of the past in its great diversity and to offer it to the public with living performances. The concerts in the splendid "Sala Terrena" (Garden Hall) of the "Rastatt Favorite Palace" (Schloss Favorite Rastatt), combined with the "historical" costumes of the musicians, resulted in the today's special reputation of the concert series and its almost historical dimension.
Since 1982 Jochen Baier has been flutist and since 1991 flutist and leader of the ensemble. Under his direction, the ensemble has developed a wealth of programs through the variety of participating musicians and through intensive researches in libraries and archives. More than 2000 different compositions were performed during this time. During 540 concerts so far (until 2017), about 300 different composers were musically introduced and their curriculum vitae were presented in the historical context with text explanations. So far the concerts have been performed by more than 150 different musicians. Some of whom participated in one concert only. Others, as member of the ensemble, influenced the concert series with their activity through years or decades. View more information (in German) under: www.festliche-serenaden.de.

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Soundscape Rastatt Favorite Palace: Gallantry

Frontcover: Gallantry
Backcover: Gallantry
EUR 22,00
CD
Soundscape Rastatt Favorite Palace
Galanterie · Gallantry

The Quantz Collegium plays
Concertos for Flute, Viola, Strings & Basso continuo:

Christoph Graupner (1683-1760):
Concerto for Viola in D Major, GWV 314

Friedrich Wilhelm Heinrich Benda (1745-1814):
Concerto for Flute in G Major, Op. 4.1

Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767):
Concerto for Viola in G Major, TWV 51:G9

Christoph Graupner (1683-1760):
Concerto for Flute & Viola in D Minor, GWV 725

Artistic Director: Jochen Baier

A live recording from Rastatt Favorite Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: c. 59 Minutes


Previews

Work(s) & Performance

I

n music, "galant" refers to the style which was fashionable from the 1720s to the 1770s. This movement featured a return to simplicity and immediacy of appeal after the complexity of the late Baroque era. This meant simpler, more song-like melodies, decreased use of polyphony, short, periodic phrases, a reduced harmonic vocabulary emphasizing tonic and dominant, and a clear distinction between soloist and accompaniment. C. P. E. Bach and Daniel Gottlob Türk, who were among the most significant theorists of the late 18th century, contrasted the galant with the "learned" or "strict" styles (Bach 1753, passim; Türk 1789, p. 405). The German "empfindsamer Stil", which seeks to express personal emotions and sensitivity, can be seen either as a closely related North-German dialect of the international "galant style" (Heartz and Brown 2001a; Heartz and Brown 2001b; Palmer 2001, xvii; Wolf 2003), or as contrasted with it, as between the music of Carl Philipp Emmanuel Bach, a founder of both styles, and that of Johann Christian Bach, who carried the galant style further and was closer to classical.
The word "galant" derives from French, where it was in use from at least the 16th century. In the early 18th century, a "Galant Homme" described a person of fashion; elegant, cultured and virtuous. The German theorist Johann Mattheson appears to have been fond of the term. It features in the title of his first publication of 1713, "Das neu-eröffnete Orchestre", oder "Universelle und gründliche Anleitung wie ein Galant Homme einen vollkommenen Begriff von der Hoheit und Würde der edlen Music erlangen". (Instead of the Gothic type rendered here in italics, Mattheson used Roman to emphasize the many non-German expressions (Mattheson 1713, title page; Heartz and Brown 2001)). Mattheson was apparently the first to refer to a "galant style" in music, in his "Das forschende Orchestre" of 1721. He recognized a lighter, modern style, einem galanten Stylo and named among its leading practitioners Giovanni Bononcini, Antonio Caldara, Georg Philipp Telemann, Alessandro Scarlatti, Antonio Vivaldi and George Frideric Handel (Heartz 2003, p. 18). All were composing Italian opera seria, a voice-driven musical style, and opera remained the central form of galant music. The new music was not as essentially a court music as it was a city music: the cities emphasized by Daniel Heartz, a recent historian of the style, were first of all Naples, then Venice, Dresden, Berlin, Stuttgart and Mannheim, and Paris. Many galant composers spent their careers in less central cities, ones that may be considered consumers rather than producers of the style galant: Johann Christian Bach and Carl Friedrich Abel in London, Giovanni Paisiello in St Petersburg, Georg Philipp Telemann in Hamburg, and Luigi Boccherini in Madrid.
The rejection of so much accumulated learning and formula in music is paralleled only by the rejection in the early 20th century of the entire structure of key relationships. Not every contemporary was delighted with this revolutionary simplification: Johann Samuel Petri, in his "Anleitung zur praktischen Musik" (1782) spoke of the "great catastrophe in music" (Blume 1970, p. 20).
The change was as much at the birth of Romanticism as it was of Classicism. The folk-song element in poetry, like the singable cantabile melody in galant music, was brought to public notice in Thomas Percy's Reliques of Ancient Poetry (1765) and James Macpherson's "Ossian" inventions during the 1760s.
Some of Telemann's later music and of Bach's sons, Johann Quantz, Hasse, Giovanni Battista Sammartini, Giuseppe Tartini, Baldassare Galuppi, Johann Stamitz, Domenico Alberti, and early Mozart are exemplars of galant style. Some of the works of the Portuguese composer Carlos Seixas are firmly in the galant style.
This simplified style was melody-driven, not constructed, as so much classical music was to be, on rhythmic or melodic motifs: "It is indicative that Haydn, even in his old age, is reported to have said, 'If you want to know whether a melody is really beautiful, sing it without accompaniment'" (Blume 1970, p. 19). This simplification also extended to harmonic rhythm, which is generally slower in galant music than is the case in the earlier baroque style, thus making lavish melodic ornamentation and nuances of secondary harmonic colorings more important (Palmer 2001, xvii).
The affinities of galant style with Rococo in the visual arts are easily overplayed, but characteristics that were valued in both genres were freshness, accessibility and charm. Watteau's fêtes galantes were rococo not merely in subject matter, but also in the lighter, cleaner tonality of his palette, and the glazes that supplied a galant translucency to his finished pictures often compared to the orchestrations of galant music (Heartz 2003).
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Quantz Collegium: Konzert

C

hristoph Graupner (13 January 1683 in Kirchberg - 10 May 1760 in Darmstadt) was a German harpsichordist and composer of high Baroque music who was a contemporary of Johann Sebastian Bach, Georg Philipp Telemann and George Frideric Handel. Born in Hartmannsdorf near Kirchberg in Saxony, Graupner received his first musical instruction from his uncle, an organist named Nicolaus Kuester. Graupner went to the University of Leipzig where he studied law (as did many composers of the time) and then completed his musical studies with Johann Kuhnau, the cantor of the Thomasschule (St. Thomas School). In 1705 Graupner left Leipzig to play the harpsichord in the orchestra of the Hamburg Opera under the direction of Reinhard Keiser, alongside George Frideric Handel, then a young violinist. In addition to playing the harpsichord, Graupner composed six operas in Hamburg, some of them in collaboration with Keiser, a popular composer of operas in Germany. In 1709 Graupner accepted a post at the court of Hesse-Darmstadt and in 1711 became the court orchestra's Hofkapellmeister (court chapel master). Graupner spent the rest of his career at the court in Hesse-Darmstadt, where his primary responsibilities were to provide music for the court chapel. He wrote music for nearly half a century, from 1709 to 1754, when he became blind. He died six years later... [From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]

F

riedrich Wilhelm Heinrich Benda (15 July 1745 in Potsdam - 19 June 1814 in Potsdam) was a German violinist, pianist and composer. Benda was the son of violin virtuoso and composer Franz Benda, from whom he received his first musical lessons. Later he studied music theory and composition with Johann Kirnberger in Berlin. In addition to his compositional achievements, he was an accomplished pianist and violinist. In the years 1765–1810, Benda was a chamber musician at the Prussian Court in Potsdam where his compositions found much acceptance. Benda composed concertos, operas, and chamber Music... [From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]

Performer(s)

T

he first founding of the Quantz Collegium dates back to 1936, when the then 22-year-old flutist Ernst Friedrich Wilhelm Bodensohn (1914-2003) founded a chamber music ensemble and gave him the name of the "father" of the German flute history, Johann Joachim Quantz. The 2nd World War destroyed all further plans. After the war, Bodensohn became the first solo flutist of the newly founded SWR-Symphony-Orchestra in Baden-Baden and lived there with his family. In addition to his orchestral work under the conductors Hans Rosbaud (1895-1962) and Ernest Bour (1913-2001), he founded in the 1950s with colleagues once again the Quantz Collegium. After discovering the wonderful "Favorite Palace" near Rastatt in Germany, he succeeded with great commitment in 1957 for the first time to perform the "Festive Serenades at Rastatt Favorite Palace". The today since more than 60 years existing concert series is charcterized by one particular aspect: The less known composers of the Baroque and Classical periods should be made accessible to the public by confrontating them with the great, unforgettable masters of music history.

Quantz Collegium

Jochen Baier ~ Flute & Artistic Leading
Boriana Baleff & Gundula Jaene ~ Violin · Agata Zieba & Kilian Ziegler ~ Viola
Regina Wilke ~ Cello · Slobodan Jovanovic ~ Harpsichord

Furthermore, the historical ensemble of the namesake Johann Joachim Quantz at the court of Frederick II. is role model and obligation for a further focus on musical content: The performance of flute music from the Baroque and the Classical era. With these two programmatic weightings, it has now been possible to achieve an extraordinary variety and longevity with this concert series. An inner desire of the ensemble is the helping to preserve the music of the past in its great diversity and to offer it to the public with living performances. The concerts in the splendid "Sala Terrena" (Garden Hall) of the "Rastatt Favorite Palace" (Schloss Favorite Rastatt), combined with the "historical" costumes of the musicians, resulted in the today's special reputation of the concert series and its almost historical dimension.
Since 1982 Jochen Baier has been flutist and since 1991 flutist and leader of the ensemble. Under his direction, the ensemble has developed a wealth of programs through the variety of participating musicians and through intensive researches in libraries and archives. More than 2000 different compositions were performed during this time. During 540 concerts so far (until 2017), about 300 different composers were musically introduced and their curriculum vitae were presented in the historical context with text explanations. So far the concerts have been performed by more than 150 different musicians. Some of whom participated in one concert only. Others, as member of the ensemble, influenced the concert series with their activity through years or decades. View more information (in German) under: www.festliche-serenaden.de.

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Works, Movements & Tracklist

Christoph Graupner (1683-1760):
Concerto in D Major, GWV 314
for Viola, 2 Violins, Viola and Basso continuo
Soloist: Agata Zieba (Viola)
1. I. Vivace [3:24] ~ 2. II. Adagio [3:04] ~ 3. III. Vivace [4:34]

Friedrich Wilhelm Heinrich Benda (1745-1814):
Concerto in G Major, Op. 4.1
for Flute, 2 Violins, Viola and Basso continuo
Soloist: Jochen Baier (Flute)
4. I. Allegretto [7:49] ~ 5. II. Cantabile [5:04] ~ 6. III. Rondo [4:38]

Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767):
Concerto in G Major, TWV 51:G9
for Viola, 2 Violins, Viola and Basso continuo
Soloist: Kilian Ziegler (Viola)
7. I. Largo [3:27] ~ 8. II. Allegro [3:03]
9. III. Andante [3:50] ~ 10. IV. Presto [3:01]

Christoph Graupner (1683-1760):
Concerto in D Minor, GWV 725
for Flute, Viola, 2 Violins, Viola and Basso continuo
Soloists: Jochen Baier (Flute) & Kilian Ziegler (Viola)
11. I. Largo [2:30] ~ 12. II. Vivace [5:33]
13. III. Andante [3:43] ~ 14. IV. Vivace [4:22]

15. Applaus [0:38]


A Live Recording to 'Direct-Stereo-Digital-HD'
from Rastatt Favorite Palace in Germany, documented, produced & released
by Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler

Concert Date: May 19 & 20, 2018

Sound Engineer: Andreas Otto Grimminger

Production & Mastering: Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler

Photography, Artwork & Coverdesign: Josef-Stefan Kindler

Staatliche Schlösser und Gärten Baden-Württemberg

The Rastatt Favorite Palace in Germany

This concert took place in the "Sala Terrena" (Garden Hall) of Rastatt Favorite Palace (Schloss Favorite Rastatt) in Germany. The Palace is the oldest German "porcelain palace" and the only one to survive almost unchanged to this day. The palace and the garden are one of 60 historic monuments in the Germany's Southwest. The "State Organisation for Palaces and Gardens of Baden-Württemberg" (in German: "Staatliche Schlösser und Gärten Baden-Württemberg") makes accessible, communicate, develops and preserves these state-owned historic monuments with the aim of preserving the authenticity of the cultural heritage, filling them with life and preserving them for future generations. Detailed information about these unique "Soundscapes" can be found at: www.schloesser-und-gaerten.de

Review

***** A memorable mash-up

A musical revolution occurred in about 1720, with the "style galant" replacing the more learned and complicated music in vogue before then. K&K Verlagsanstalt, which specializes in audiophile recordings made in historic churches and palaces, has put together a winning project here, with the venerable Quantz Collegium (established in 1936) performing highly appealing music from the Garden Hall of the Rastatt Favorite Palace in Baden-Württemberg. Recorded at two live concerts, we have here four concertos for viola or flute, or both, by Graupner, Telemann and FWH Benda, all written in the accessible, tuneful new style. Mention should be made of Josef-Stefan Kindler's superb photos in the CD notes, which I at first took for paintings in the Rococo style of Tiepolo. They capture both the spirit of the original music and venue and that of the Quantz Collegium and K&K's Historically Informed reconstructions.
"Every current of fashion or of worldview", says Walter Benjamin in The Arcades Project, "derives its force from what is forgotten." Three centuries on, the stripping down of J. S. Bach's erudite polyphonic puzzles can seem, according to one's sensibilities or mood, either a vital breath of fresh air or a savage dumbing down for the kind of mindless 18th century twits personified by Hugh Laurie's Prince George in Blackadder's Third Series. Luckily we can still take pleasure in the simple joys of melody and a direct and honest, if sometimes guileless, clarity. This music is well-crafted, but the strongest movements, those in Telemann's Viola Concerto especially, can seem very much self-aware. It won't be long before the streamlining process leads to a new round of mannerist complexities.
Though one won't find the final degree of authentic style from the Quantz Collegium, including the three soloists, flutist Jochen Baier and violists Agata Zieba and Killian Ziegler, there is much to admire in these performances. The admirably spare technology and truly galant way of playing combined with the elaborate costumes and the rococo porcelain excesses of the venue make for a memorable mash-up.

Dean Frey on several-instruments.blogspot.com, on Arkiv Music and on Amazon

Bach meets Vivaldi

Frontcover: Bach meets Vivaldi
Backcover: Bach meets Vivaldi
EUR 22,00
CD
Soundscape Maulbronn Monastery
Bach meets Vivaldi

The Lautten Compagney Berlin plays
according to the traditions of the time

Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750):
Concerto in A Minor, BWV 1041 · Concerto in E Major, BWV 1042
Concerto in D Minor, BWV 1043

Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741):
Concerto in G Minor, RV 157
Concerto in B Minor, RV 580 ("L'Estro Armonico", Op. 3, No. 10)
Concerto in D Minor, RV 565 ("L'Estro Armonico", Op. 3, No. 11)

Soloist: Julia Schröder (Violin)
Concertmistress: Birgit Schnurpfeil · Artistic Director: Wolfgang Katschner

A live recording from the church of the German
UNESCO World Heritage Site Maulbronn Monastery

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: c. 67 Minutes

Previews

Work(s) & Performance
Johann Sebastian Bach

T

he Concerto for Two Violins, Strings, and Continuo in D minor, BWV 1043, also known as the Double Violin Concerto, is perhaps one of the most famous works by Johann Sebastian Bach and considered among the best examples of the work of the late Baroque period. Bach may have written it between 1717 and 1723 when he was the Kapellmeister at the court of Anhalt-Köthen, Germany, though the work's performance materials for the Ordinaire Concerten that Bach ran as the Director of the Collegium Musicum in Leipzig are dated c. 1730–31. Later in 1739, in Leipzig, he created an arrangement for two harpsichords, transposed into C minor, BWV 1062. In addition to the two soloists, the concerto is scored for strings and basso continuo. The concerto is characterized by the subtle yet expressive relationship between the violins throughout the work. The musical structure of this piece uses fugal imitation and much counterpoint... From Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia

While the Violin Concerto in A minor, BWV 1041, is "generally thought to have been composed at Köthen in 1717–23", Christoph Wolff has argued that the work may have been written in Leipzig during Bach's time as director of the Collegium Musicum; John Butt also believes that Bach wrote it "probably soon after taking over the Leipzig Collegium Musicum in 1729". In any event, the only autograph source to survive are parts Bach copied out (along with other copyists) in Leipzig circa 1730 from a now lost score or draft... From Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia

The Violin Concerto in E major, BWV 1042, is a concerto for violin, strings, and continuo in three movements: Allegro (with ritornello), Adagio (with a ground bass) and Allegro assai (with an overall structure of a rondo). While there are two 18th-century scores, neither is autographed; however, Bach re-used the concerto as the model for his Harpsichord Concerto in D major, BWV 1054, found in his 1737–39 autographed manuscript of these works. The concerto is thought to have been written early in Bach's time in Weimar, when he was Konzertmeister at the Ducal Court... From Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia

Antonio Vivaldi

L'estro armonico (the harmonic inspiration), Antonio Vivaldi's Op. 3, is a set of 12 concertos for stringed instruments, first published in Amsterdam in 1711. Vivaldi's Twelve Trio Sonatas, Op. 1, and Twelve Violin Sonatas, Op. 2, only contained sonatas, thus L'estro armonico was his first collection of concertos appearing in print. It was also the first time he chose a foreign publisher, Estienne Roger, instead of an Italian. Each concerto was printed in eight parts: four violins, two violas, cello and continuo. The continuo part was printed as a figured bass for violone and harpsichord. The concertos belong to the concerto a 7 format, that is: for each concerto there are seven independent parts. In each consecutive group of three concertos, the first is a concerto for four violins, the second for two violins, and the third a solo violin concerto. The cello gets solistic passages in several of the concertos for four and two violins, so that a few of the concertos conform to the traditional Roman concerto grosso format where a concertino of two violins and cello plays in contrast to a string orchestra. L'estro armonico pioneered orchestral unisono in concerto movements. Vivaldi composed a few concertos specifically for L'estro armonico, while other concertos of the set had been composed at an earlier date. Vivaldi scholar Michael Talbot described the set as "perhaps the most influential collection of instrumental music to appear during the whole of the eighteenth century". L'estro armonico (the harmonic inspiration) was published as Antonio Vivaldi's Op. 3 in Amsterdam in 1711. Vivaldi's Op. 1 and Op. 2 had only contained sonatas, thus L'estro armonico was his first collection of concertos appearing in print. It was also the first time Vivaldi chose a foreign publisher, Estienne Roger, instead of an Italian. Vivaldi composed a few concertos specifically for L'estro armonico, while other concertos of the set had been composed at an earlier date... From Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia

Staatliche Schlösser und Gärten Baden-Württemberg

This concert took place in the church of the Maulbronn monastery in Germany. Built in the 12th century, the Maulbronn monastery with its Romanesque-Gothic basilica is considered as the most complete preserved medieval monastery north of the Alps. The monastery has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1993. It's one of 60 historic monuments in the Germany's Southwest. The "State Organisation for Palaces and Gardens of Baden-Württemberg" (in German: "Staatliche Schlösser und Gärten Baden-Württemberg") makes accessible, communicate, develops and preserves these state-owned historic monuments with the aim of preserving the authenticity of the cultural heritage, filling them with life and preserving them for future generations. Detailed information about these unique "Soundscapes" can be found at: www.schloesser-und-gaerten.de

Performer(s)
Lautten Compagney BerlinLautten Compagney Berlin

Soloist: Julia Schröder (Violin)
lautten compagney Berlin:
2nd Solo Violin & Concertmaster ~ Birgit Schnurpfeil
Violin ~ Matthias Hummel, Daniela Gubatz · Viola ~ Bettina Ihrig
Violin / Viola ~ Magdalena Schenk-Bader · Cello ~ Ulrike Becker
Double Bass ~ Alf Brauner · Harpsichord ~ Elina Albach
Lute ~ Johannes Gontarski

T

he lautten compagney Berlin is one of the most renowned and creative baroque instrument ensembles in Germany. Their concerts, under the artistic direction of Wolfgang Katschner, have fascinated audiences for three decades. With their infectious joy in performing and their innovative concepts, these 'early musicians' effortlessly translate the musical language of the Baroque to the present. The ensemble has received numerous awards for its exciting musical collaborations (2010 ECHO Klassik for 'Timeless', 2012 Rheingau Musik Preis). The lautten compagney is a regular guest at leading national and international concert halls and festivals, including Concertgebouw Amsterdam, Vienna Musikverein, Handel Festival Halle and Mosel Musikfestival. Twice a year, Wolfgang Katschner and the lautten compagney invite audiences to join them at AEQUINOX, a music festival for the equinox in Neuruppin, Brandenburg. Since 2014 the baroque musicians are also the ensemble in residence at the Festival Alter Musik Bernau.

The violinist Julia Schröder studied at the conservatory 'Gasteig' in Munich, at the Basel Music Academy and at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis. Since 2004 Julia Schröder is the concert-mistress and director of the Basel Chamber Orchestra. Under her leadership the ensemble played in major concert halls in Europe such as the Vienna Musikverein, the Berlin Philharmonic, the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, the Cité de la Musique in Paris and the Barbican Centre in London. In parallel she is a soloist accompanying artists such as Sol Gabetta, Andreas Scholl and Cecilia Bartoli. In 2010 she was called at the Freiburg Music Academy (D) to be a violin professor. She enjoys playing with Maurice Steger, Marcelo Nisinman, Gerard Wyss, Werner Güra and Christoph Berner. Julia Schröder is now a modern and universal musician, feeling comfortable in the world of modern violin as well as in the style of baroque play, while being also at ease in the improvisations of Jazz and she likes to play tango, too.

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

The concerts at the UNESCO World Heritage Maulbronn Monastery supply the ideal conditions for our aspirations. It is, above all, the atmosphere of the romantic, candle-lit arches, the magic of the monastery in its unadulterated sublime presence and tranquillity that impresses itself upon the performers and audience of these concerts. Renowned soloists and ensembles from the international arena repeatedly welcome the opportunity to appear here - enjoying the unparalleled acoustic and architectural beauty of this World Heritage Site, providing exquisite performances of secular and sacred music, documented by us in our Maulbronn Monastery Edition.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Works, Movements & Tracklist

Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)
Concerto in D Minor, BWV 1043
for 2 Violins, Strings and Basso continuo
Solo Violins: Birgit Schnurpfeil & Julia Schröder
1. I. Vivace [3:28] ~ 2. II. Largo ma non tanto [6:11]
3. III. Allegro [4:36]

Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741)
Concerto in B Minor, RV 580
No. 10 from "L'Estro Armonico", Op. 3
for 4 Violins, 2 Viols and Basso continuo
4. I. Allegro [3:38] ~ 5. II. Largo - Larghetto [1:44]
6. III. Allegro [3:14]

Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)
Concerto in A Minor, BWV 1041
for Violin, Strings and Basso continuo
Solo Violin: Julia Schröder
7. I. Allegro [3:42] ~ 8. II. Andante [6:05]
9. III. Allegro assai [3:35]

Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741)
Concerto in D Minor, RV 565
No. 11 from "L'Estro Armonico", Op. 3
for 2 Violins, Cello, Strings and Basso continuo
Solo Violins: Birgit Schnurpfeil & Matthias Hummel
10. I. Allegro - Adagio e spiccato - Allegro [3:55]
11. II. Largo e spiccato [2:23] ~ 12. III. Allegro [2:21]

Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741)
Concerto in G Minor, RV 157
for Strings and Basso continuo
13. I. Allegro [1:53] ~ 14. II. Largo [1:35]
15. III. Allegro [2:09]

Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)
Concerto in E Major, BWV 1042
for Violin, Strings and Basso continuo
Solo Violin: Julia Schröder
16. I. Allegro [7:07] ~ 17. II. Adagio [6:04]
18. III. Allegro assai [2:41]

19. Applause [0:40]


A concert recording to 'Direct 2-Track Stereo Digital HD'
from the church of the German UNESCO World Heritage Site Maulbronn Monastery,
recorded, released & created
by Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler
in cooperation with Sebastian Eberhardt,
Klosterkonzerte Maulbronn ("Maulbronn Monastery Concerts").

Concert Date: May 26, 2017

Sound & Recording Engineer: Andreas Otto Grimminger

Mastering: Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler

Photography: Josef-Stefan Kindler

Artwork & Coverdesign: Josef-Stefan Kindler

Staatliche Schlösser und Gärten Baden-Württemberg

The UNESCO World Heritage Site Maulbronn Monastery

This concert took place in the church of the Maulbronn monastery in Germany. Built in the 12th century, the Maulbronn monastery with its Romanesque-Gothic basilica is considered as the most complete preserved medieval monastery north of the Alps. The monastery has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1993. It's one of 60 historic monuments in the Germany's Southwest. The "State Organisation for Palaces and Gardens of Baden-Württemberg" (in German: "Staatliche Schlösser und Gärten Baden-Württemberg") makes accessible, communicate, develops and preserves these state-owned historic monuments with the aim of preserving the authenticity of the cultural heritage, filling them with life and preserving them for future generations. Detailed information about these unique "Soundscapes" can be found at: www.schloesser-und-gaerten.de

Review

An audiophile snapshot of permanent value

Publishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is the aim, the philosophy of K&K, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so they record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. This concert took place in the church of the Maulbronn monastery in Germany. Built in the 12th century, the Maulbronn monastery with its Romanesque-Gothic basilica is considered as the most complete preserved medieval monastery north of the Alps.

Arkiv Music - The source for Classical Music

Royal Christmas: Joy to the World

Track

Cover
EUR 16,75
Royal Christmas
Joy to the World

Baroque Christmas at the English Court,
performed according to the traditions of the time by the Ensemble Nel Dolce

Works by Henry Purcell (1659-1695), George Frideric Handel (1685-1759),
Nicola Antonio Porpora (1686-1768), Nicola Matteis (1650-1713),
John Dowland (1563-1626), Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber (1644-1704),
Gottfried Keller (1650-1704), Pierre Prowo (1697-1757) & Arcangelo Corelli (1653-1713)

Stephanie Buyken (Recorders & Vocals) · Olga Piskorz (Violin)
Harm Meiners (Cello) · Flóra Fábri (Harpsichord)

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 58 Min. 02 Sec.
Digital Album · 29 Tracks · incl. Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Work(s) & Performance
Castle Concerts

In castles and palaces - Romance through the centuries

Castles and fortresses, kings and dukes have always stimulated the imagination and stand for romance through the centuries. Aristocrats and lords of the manor as patrons of arts, the emotional music culture at the courts and legendary castles are programmatical subjects, which dedicates the series "Castle Concerts" from many aspects. The fact, that romance in music encompasses much more than the so named epoch, makes many of the compositions from different centuries and their interpretation by outstanding artists, which are presented in this series, palpable.
Listen to that also in the concert here. The fact, that even Baroque composers put a lot of emotion into their mostly formal rigorous compositions, can be experienced during our festive Advent concert. The concert, titled "Royal Christmas - Joy to the World", provides an insight into the music culture at the English court during the Baroque period, when all kind of musical art in Europe was unthinkable without the king's and ruler's role as patron of arts. The German landgraves of Hessen-Homburg has also encouraged arts. But above all, they have left us with the castle church in Bad Homburg vor der Höhe a wonderful place, where the four musicians of the ensemble "Nel Dolce" virtuosly performed strongly different compositons on reconstructed historical instruments. Let yourself be carried away to a glorious time and enjoy baroque joie de vivre.
Decisive for the conception of this concert was a performance schedule, which could have sounded like this or similar like this at the English court in London as a Christmas concert at the time of the High-Baroque era. Almost without exception, composers were selected, who were either born in England or emigrated from other European countries to London to create and perform in this cultural metropolis during the Baroque period. At that time London's cultural life was characterized by a mixture of many different regional music styles of Europe, brought by many immigranted musicians and composers from numerous countries (especially from France, Italy and Germany) from their homeland. The various Christmas aspects in the selected compositions are expressed, among other things, by the selected keys, which had a strong meaning in the Baroque period. The bow spans from D Major as a happy-shining key over the contemplatively warm key F Major (the Baroque musician Johann Mattheson wrote: "The noblest and highest feelings are as simple as the feelings of a beautiful person, who succeeds everything.") to B-Flat Major, which Mattheson ascribes the affects "joyful", "great" and "with sweet modesty".

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Works, Movements & Tracklist

Henry Purcell (1659-1695)
1. Prelude in D Major [1:52]
for Recorder, Violin, Cello & Basso Continuo

George Frideric Handel (1685‐1759)
Trio Sonata in F Major, Op. 2 No. 4, HWV 389
for Alto Recorder, Violin & Basso Continuo
2. I. Larghetto [2:08] ~ 3. II. Allegro [2:50]
4. III. Adagio [2:15] ~ 5. IV. Allegro [1:59]
6. V. Allegro [2:11]

George Frideric Handel (1685‐1759)
7. Joy to the World [1:34]
for Soprano, Violin & Basso Continuo
Lyrics by Isaac Watts (1674-1748)

Nicola Antonio Porpora (1686-1768)
Cello Sonata No. 1 in C Major
for Cello, Violin & Basso Continuo
8. I. Amoroso [1:40] ~ 9. II. Allegro [1:54]
10. III. Tempo giusto [1:43] ~ 11. IV. Allegro [2:40]

Nicola Matteis (1650‐1713)
12. Sonata "Ad imitatione della Trombetta" in D Major [4:52]
for Recorder, Violin, Cello & Basso Continuo
from: "The Second Book of Aires for two Violins & Bass"

John Dowland (1563-1626)
13. Awake sweet love thou art return'd [2:57]
for Soprano, Violin & Basso Continuo
No. 19 from "The Firste Booke of Songes or Ayres"

Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber (1644‐1704)
14. Sonata III in B Minor, C 92 "The Nativity" [5:43]
from the "Mystery Sonatas" for Violin & Basso Continuo

Gottfried Keller (1650-1704)
Trio Sonata in B-Flat Major
for Recorder, Violin & Basso Continuo
15. I. Adagio - Allegro [1:49] ~ 16. II. Allegro [1:16]
17. III. Adagio [1:25] ~ 18. IV. Allegro [1:00]

Arcangelo Corelli (1653-1713)
Concerto Grosso in G Minor, Op. 6, No. 8
"Fatto per la Notte di Natale" · "Christmas Concerto"
for Alto Recorder, Violin & Basso Continuo
19. I. Vivace - Grave [1:13] ~ 20. II. Allegro [2:27]
21. III. Adagio - Allegro - Adagio [3:02] ~ 22. IV. Vivace [1:00]
23. V. Allegro [2:00] ~ 24. VI. Pastorale ad libitum: Largo [3:48]

Pierre Prowo (1697-1757)
25. IV. Presto from the Trio Sonata in D Minor, Twv 42:d10 [1:43]
for Alto Recorder, Violin & Basso Continuo
(formerly attributed to Georg Philipp Telemann)

26. Applause [0:49]



A concert recording to "Direct 2-Track Stereo Digital HD"
from the church of Bad Homburg Castle in Germany, December 14th 2014,
recorded, released & created by Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler
in cooperation with Volker Northoff

Concert Date: December 14, 2014

Sound & Recording Engineer: Andreas Otto Grimminger

Mastering: Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler

Photography: Josef-Stefan Kindler

Artwork & Coverdesign: Josef-Stefan Kindler

Review

An inspired performance, perfectly coordinated

OUVERTURE - Das Klassik-Blog, December 2017

Joy to the World

Frontcover
Backcover
EUR 22,00
CD
Royal Christmas
Joy to the World

Baroque Christmas at the English Court,
performed according to the traditions of the time
by the Ensemble Nel Dolce

Works by Henry Purcell (1659-1695), George Frideric Handel (1685-1759),
Nicola Antonio Porpora (1686-1768), Nicola Matteis (1650-1713),
John Dowland (1563-1626), Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber (1644-1704),
Gottfried Keller (1650-1704), Pierre Prowo (1697-1757) & Arcangelo Corelli (1653-1713)

Stephanie Buyken (Recorders & Vocals) · Olga Piskorz (Violin)
Harm Meiners (Cello) · Flóra Fábri (Harpsichord)

A live recording from Bad Homburg Palace in Germany

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: c. 60 Minutes

Previews

Work(s) & Performance
Castle Concerts

In castles and palaces - Romance through the centuries

Castles and fortresses, kings and dukes have always stimulated the imagination and stand for romance through the centuries. Aristocrats and lords of the manor as patrons of arts, the emotional music culture at the courts and legendary castles are programmatical subjects, which dedicates the series "Castle Concerts" from many aspects. The fact, that romance in music encompasses much more than the so named epoch, makes many of the compositions from different centuries and their interpretation by outstanding artists, which are presented in this series, palpable.
Listen to that also in the concert here. The fact, that even Baroque composers put a lot of emotion into their mostly formal rigorous compositions, can be experienced during our festive Advent concert. The concert, titled "Royal Christmas - Joy to the World", provides an insight into the music culture at the English court during the Baroque period, when all kind of musical art in Europe was unthinkable without the king's and ruler's role as patron of arts. The German landgraves of Hessen-Homburg has also encouraged arts. But above all, they have left us with the castle church in Bad Homburg vor der Höhe a wonderful place, where the four musicians of the ensemble "Nel Dolce" virtuosly performed strongly different compositons on reconstructed historical instruments. Let yourself be carried away to a glorious time and enjoy baroque joie de vivre.
Decisive for the conception of this concert was a performance schedule, which could have sounded like this or similar like this at the English court in London as a Christmas concert at the time of the High-Baroque era. Almost without exception, composers were selected, who were either born in England or emigrated from other European countries to London to create and perform in this cultural metropolis during the Baroque period. At that time London's cultural life was characterized by a mixture of many different regional music styles of Europe, brought by many immigranted musicians and composers from numerous countries (especially from France, Italy and Germany) from their homeland. The various Christmas aspects in the selected compositions are expressed, among other things, by the selected keys, which had a strong meaning in the Baroque period. The bow spans from D Major as a happy-shining key over the contemplatively warm key F Major (the Baroque musician Johann Mattheson wrote: "The noblest and highest feelings are as simple as the feelings of a beautiful person, who succeeds everything.") to B-Flat Major, which Mattheson ascribes the affects "joyful", "great" and "with sweet modesty".

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Works, Movements & Tracklist

Henry Purcell (1659-1695)
1. Prelude in D Major [1:52]
for Recorder, Violin, Cello & Basso Continuo

George Frideric Handel (1685‐1759)
Trio Sonata in F Major, Op. 2 No. 4, HWV 389
for Alto Recorder, Violin & Basso Continuo
2. I. Larghetto [2:08] ~ 3. II. Allegro [2:50]
4. III. Adagio [2:15] ~ 5. IV. Allegro [1:59]
6. V. Allegro [2:11]

George Frideric Handel (1685‐1759)
7. Joy to the World [1:34]
for Soprano, Violin & Basso Continuo
Lyrics by Isaac Watts (1674-1748)

Nicola Antonio Porpora (1686-1768)
Cello Sonata No. 1 in C Major
for Cello, Violin & Basso Continuo
8. I. Amoroso [1:40] ~ 9. II. Allegro [1:54]
10. III. Tempo giusto [1:43] ~ 11. IV. Allegro [2:40]

Nicola Matteis (1650‐1713)
12. Sonata "Ad imitatione della Trombetta" in D Major [4:52]
for Recorder, Violin, Cello & Basso Continuo
from: "The Second Book of Aires for two Violins & Bass"

John Dowland (1563-1626)
13. Awake sweet love thou art return'd [2:57]
for Soprano, Violin & Basso Continuo
No. 19 from "The Firste Booke of Songes or Ayres"

Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber (1644‐1704)
14. Sonata III in B Minor, C 92 "The Nativity" [5:43]
from the "Mystery Sonatas" for Violin & Basso Continuo

Gottfried Keller (1650-1704)
Trio Sonata in B-Flat Major
for Recorder, Violin & Basso Continuo
15. I. Adagio - Allegro [1:49] ~ 16. II. Allegro [1:16]
17. III. Adagio [1:25] ~ 18. IV. Allegro [1:00]

Arcangelo Corelli (1653-1713)
Concerto Grosso in G Minor, Op. 6, No. 8
"Fatto per la Notte di Natale" · "Christmas Concerto"
for Alto Recorder, Violin & Basso Continuo
19. I. Vivace - Grave [1:13] ~ 20. II. Allegro [2:27]
21. III. Adagio - Allegro - Adagio [3:02] ~ 22. IV. Vivace [1:00]
23. V. Allegro [2:00] ~ 24. VI. Pastorale ad libitum: Largo [3:48]

Pierre Prowo (1697-1757)
25. IV. Presto from the Trio Sonata in D Minor, Twv 42:d10 [1:43]
for Alto Recorder, Violin & Basso Continuo
(formerly attributed to Georg Philipp Telemann)

26. Applause [0:49]



A concert recording to "Direct 2-Track Stereo Digital HD"
from the church of Bad Homburg Castle in Germany, December 14th 2014,
recorded, released & created by Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler
in cooperation with Volker Northoff

Concert Date: December 14, 2014

Sound & Recording Engineer: Andreas Otto Grimminger

Mastering: Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler

Photography: Josef-Stefan Kindler

Artwork & Coverdesign: Josef-Stefan Kindler

Review

An inspired performance, perfectly coordinated

OUVERTURE - Das Klassik-Blog, December 2017

Mozart: All Chamber Piano Concertos

Track

Cover - Mozart: All Chamber Piano Concertos
Cover - Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 11Cover - Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 12Cover - Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 13Cover - Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 14
EUR 13,30
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
All Chamber Piano Concertos

The 4 Piano Concertos by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart,
which were originally composed for Piano & String Quartet,
performed by Christoph Soldan (Piano) and the Silesian Chamber Soloists (String Quintet)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
Piano Concerto No. 11 in F Major, K. 413 · Piano Concerto No. 12 in A Major, K. 414
Piano Concerto No. 13 in C Major, K. 415 · Piano Concerto No. 14 in E-Flat Major, K. 449
Recorded live in two concerts to 'Direct 2-Track Stereo Digital HD'

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 1 Hour / 26 Min. / 29 Sec.
Digital Double Album · 12 Tracks · incl. Digital Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Work(s) & Performance
MozartMozart

"The concertos are just the medium between being too heavy and too light - they are very brilliant - pleasant to hear - certainly without falling into the void - here and there it is possible for the connoisseur alone to get satisfaction - but such - that the laymen can be contented without knowing why."
Mozart about the three concertos for piano K. 413, K. 414 and K. 415
in a letter to his father on December 28th, 1782

"I have to write in great haste, as it is already half past six, and for six o'clock I have ordered some people for making a little music; (...) now, two concertos are still missing for the Suscription Concertos."
Mozart in a letter to his father on December 28th, 1782

H

aving provided us with magnificent examples of concertos for stringed and wind instruments, Mozart reaches the ideal conception of a concerto with his piano concertos. They are the high point and peak of his instrumental producing. In Mozart's piano concertos two equal forces are facing each other that are really able to compete. They are therefore essentially his very unique creation. The piano concertos K. 413 - 415 and K. 449 were the first in a row of 17 momentous concertos created in Vienna and consequently founding his fame as virtuoso to the Viennese audience. The double possibility given to the performance, of either playing full orchestra, with oboe and horn (in the C-Major also with timpani and trumpet) or just with string quartet shows the flexibility he wanted to produce.
The concerto in C-Major K. 415 is the most splendid one. The second movement Mozart first planned in C-Minor, but he gave up this intention in favor of a light, jaunty movement in F-major. Nevertheless, there is a slight reminiscence to this original minor movement in the concerto's last movement: the vivid six-quaver beat with his appeal to the Papageno-motif is interrupted two times by a melancholic insertion in c-minor. The concerto in E-Flat-Major K. 449 is the first composition registered by Mozart in his own catalogue of works that he started in February 1784. It belongs to the most accomplished works of Mozart's music, with his latent, but dramatic dynamic and its depth that goes beyond the diverging antagonism of musical forces.
The piano concertos of Mozart never seem to touch the border of the socially appropriate - how could it, being designed to be acclaimed. But even so, it opens the doors to tell about the dark and the bright, the serious and the cheerful, the deepest - to lead its audience to a higher level of knowledge. The audience that is to deal with Mozart's piano concertos is the best there is.

Christoph Soldan

Performer(s)
Christoph Soldan

T

he pianist Christoph Soldan (born 1964) studied under the Professors Eliza Hansen and Christoph Eschenbach at the Hamburg Musikhochschule. His break-through to active international concert playing came in a tour with Leonard Bernstein in summer 1989. About Christoph Soldan, the world-famous director said, "I am impressed by the soulful size of this young musician". Since then, Soldan has played in numerous tours with renowned orchestras across Europe and abroad. In particular, this can be seen in the CD recordings of all of Mozart's piano concertos, which were performed and recorded from 1996 until 2006. A tour of piano evenings took place in Mexico and other countries in Central America in October 1997. In August 1998 he debuted in Salzburg and in the Chamber Music Hall of the Berlin Philharmonic, and in May 1999 in the Leipzig Gewandhaus. In March 2000, there were three piano evenings in Japan. So far, there have been radio and television productions with the Hessische Rundfunk, Frankfurt, Deutschlandfunk, SWR, ORF and ZDF. The Bayerische Rundfunk broadcasted his piano evening in the Munich Residenz in October 1998 and his concert in the Bad Brückenau music festival live in 1999. Radio Bremen braodcasted his recital in Bremen in August 2002. Starting in 1996 Soldan was performing all 27 piano concertos by Mozart together with the slovakian chamber orchestra "Cappella Istropolitana", the "Chamber Orchestra of Pforzheim" and the "Silesian Chamber Orchestra" Katowice. This cycle of concerts ended in January 2006, performing the concertos for 2 and 3 pianos. Christoph Soldan developed a "pas de deux for piano and dance", together with his wife, the dancer and choreographer Stefanie Goes. The première took place in Stuttgart in May 2000. In Spring 2001 he participated the Prague Spring Festival accompanied by the slovakian chamber orchestra "Cappella Istropolitana". Two recitals in Hamburg and Berlin were followed by a live-recording of two Mozart piano concertos in the medieval monastery of Maulbronn in September 2002. In January 2004 the première of the new dance project "something about humans and angels" took place in Stuttgart followed by a concert-tour to South Africa. Since 2007 Soldan is working also as a conductor concerning the performances of piano concertos by Bach and Mozart. Christoph Soldan will be guesting in Germany, Italy, Spain, Austria, Poland and Slovakia with various programmes such as recitals, literary concerts, children's concerts, as soloist with 5 of Mozart's piano concertos, Schumann's piano concerto, mendelssohn's doubleconcerto, Chopin's e-minor concerto as well as in chamber music programmes with Brahm's piano quintet op. 34 and Schubert's "trout" quintet. Since 1994 Christoph Soldan was artistic director of the "Schubertiade auf Schloß Eyb". In 2007 together with his wife Soldan founded a theatre in the north of Baden-Württemberg between Stuttgart and Heidelberg, where all artistic programmes are taking place since then. The German press describes Christoph Soldan as an artist personality who works with the spiritual intensity and soulful dimension of a piece of music, rather than giving a purely technical virtuoso performance. This challenge to music and to himself is rarely seen today.

Silesian Chamber Soloists

T

he Silesian Chamber Soloists are the section leaders of the Silesian Philharmonic Orchestra in Katowice (Śląska Orkiestra Kameralna). All of them are outstanding soloists, who studied on several music-universities in Poland and Germany. In 1993 the ensemble has been founded as a quartet first and was enlarged later by an additional doublebass position. The high level of artistic performance made the quintet to the leading chamber ensemble in Silesia. Concert tours have been organized to various festivals within Poland and other European countries. The Silesian Chamber Soloists performed with great success in the "Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival", "MDR Musiksommer" and the "Rheingau Musik Festival". Cooperations were made with outstanding conductors and soloists, such as Krzysztof Penderecki, Yehudi Menuhin, Valery Gergiev, Christoph Eschenbach, Justus Frantz, Pinchas Zuckerman, Maxim Vengerov, Mscislav Rostropovich and Christoph Soldan. One special feature does result from the fact, that the concertmaster of the ensemble, Dariusz Zboch, is not only a very gifted violinist but at the same time arranging pieces of music. His last work has been published on two CD productions, a cycle of arrangements of the solid goal hits from the 60th and 70th concerning the songs of Procol Harum, Queen, Pink Floyd, Elvis Presley, The Beatles, Abba and Deep Purple. This true "cross-over-project" is combining popular music with works of the classical repertoire.
Dariusz Zboch (Violin) · Jakub Łysik (Violin) · Jarosław Marzec (Viola)
Katarzyna Biedrowska (Cello) · Krzysztof Korzeń (Double Bass)

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

The concerts at the UNESCO World Heritage Maulbronn Monastery supply the ideal conditions for our aspirations. It is, above all, the atmosphere of the romantic, candle-lit arches, the magic of the monastery in its unadulterated sublime presence and tranquillity that impresses itself upon the performers and audience of these concerts. Renowned soloists and ensembles from the international arena repeatedly welcome the opportunity to appear here - enjoying the unparalleled acoustic and architectural beauty of this World Heritage Site, providing exquisite performances of secular and sacred music, documented by us in our Maulbronn Monastery Edition.

The concert grand piano is incontestably the king of instruments. We could now wax lyrical about its incomparable dynamics and go into its ability to go from the tenderest of sounds in a soft minor key to the magnificent power of a fortissimo, or I could rhapsodise about its impressive size and elegance. But what makes this instrument really fascinating is its individuality, since each one is unique in itself - created by a master. A concert grand has a life all of its own that a virtuoso can really "get into" and hence bring the work of the composer to life. In our Grand Piano Masters Series, we get into the character and soul of the concert grand piano and experience, during the performance itself, the dialogue between the instrument, the virtuoso and the performance space.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Works, Movements & Tracklist

Disc 1

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
Piano Concerto No. 11
in F Major, K. 413
1. I.: Allegro [8:45]
2. II.: Larghetto [6:50]
3. III.: Tempo di Menuetto [4:59]

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
Piano Concerto No. 12
in A Major, K. 414
4. I.: Allegro [9:47]
5. II.: Andante [6:50]
6. III.: Rondeau. Allegretto [5:55]

A concert recording to "Direct 2-Track Stereo Digital HD"
from the German UNESCO World Heritage Site Maulbronn Monastery, June 26th 2016,
recorded, released & created by Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler
in cooperation with Sebastian Eberhardt, Monastery Concerts Maulbronn.

Concert Date: June 26, 2016

Sound & Recording Engineer: Andreas Otto Grimminger

Mastering: Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler

Photography: Josef-Stefan Kindler

Artwork & Coverdesign: Josef-Stefan Kindler

Disc 2

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
Piano Concerto No. 13
in C Major, K. 415
1. I.: Allegro [9:53]
2. II.: Andante [6:18]
3. III.: Rondeau. Allegro [7:18]

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
Piano Concerto No. 14
in E-Flat Major, K. 449
4. I.: Allegro vivace [8:26]
5. II.: Andantino [5:24]
6. III.: Allegro ma non troppo [5:57]

A concert recording to "Direct 2-Track Stereo Digital HD"
from the theatre "Saalbau" in Neustadt (Germany), February 3rd 2015,
recorded, released & created by Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler
in cooperation with Christoph Soldan.

Concert Date: February 3, 2015

Sound & Recording Engineer: Andreas Otto Grimminger

Mastering: Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler

Photography: Josef-Stefan Kindler

Artwork & Coverdesign: Josef-Stefan Kindler

Review

***** A fine alternative... I strongly recommend this set.

I accidentally came upon this two disc set on Spotify. If, like me, you are always on the look out for new performances and versions of Mozart piano concertos you will probably enjoy these performances, and at the same time know that they are by the master's hand, so nobody else has fiddled with them ! The string quintet accompanying is very alert and sympathetic to the many strands and gradations of colour, even sometimes sounding like a larger body than they really are. Christoph Soldan is a fine Mozart pianist and his piano is well recorded. I do not know what type or make it is, but it has a very bright and appealing sound which contrats well with the strings. Christoph Soldan has specialised in Mozart for a long time and has many recordings to his name and It is a pity that he is not more well known over here. These are not particularly intimate performances as the performers project themselves well, though there is plenty of feeling and beauty in their playing. I do not like showy or long or gimmicky cadenzas, but I smiled at his in the finale to concerto no, 14. I wouldn't want to be without the full orchestral versions of these concertos and though these do not displace them, they are immensely enjoyable. I strongly recommend this set.

Paul Capell on Amazon.com

Review

Featured by Spotify​

This release is featured by Spotify​ in the editorial playlist CLASSICAL FOCUS

The Spotify editorial team

K&K Impressions · Choral Concerts

Movie Cover
EUR 4,99
K&K Impressions
Choral Concerts

Visual impressions by Josef-Stefan Kindler
featuring choral works by Mendelsssohn, Sweelinck,
Sandström, Rachmaninov, Verdi & Bruckner,
recorded in concerts at the church of the German
UNESCO World Heritage Site Maulbronn Monastery

15 Chapters · Runtime: c. 67 Minutes

Movie Cover
MOVIE

Chapters & Tracklist

Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847):
Six Anthems for Double Chorus, Op. 79
performed by the Maulbronn Chamber Choir,
conducted by Jürgen Budday
1. Advent: Lasset uns frohlocken [1:41]
Advent: Let our hearts be joyful
2. Weihnachten: Frohlocket ihr Völker auf Erden [1:45]
Christmas: Rejoice, O ye peoples
3. Neujahr: Herr Gott, du bist unsre Zuflucht [3:11]
New Year's Day: O Lord, hast been our refuge
4. Passion: Herr, gedenke nicht unsrer Übeltaten [1:54]
Lent: Lord, take no remembrance of our misdoings
5. Karfreitag: Um unsrer Sünden willen [1:53]
Good Friday: Because of our transgressions
6. Himmelfahrt: Erhaben, o Herr, über alles Lob [1:55]
Ascension: Exalted, O Lord, over all our praise

Musica Sacra
Buddhist Shõmyõ & Gregorian Chants
performed by the Schola Gregoriana Pragensis
& Gjosan-rjú Tendai Sómjó (Buddhist Monks from Japan),
conducted by Saikawa Buntai & David Eben
7. Amida-kyo (Amida-Sutra) & Kyrie IV: Herr, erbarme dich [9:20]
Lord have mercy
8. Sorai kada (Lobgesang/Anthem) & Psalm 51: Miserere mei Deus [10:15]
Erbarme dich über mich, Gott / Have mercy on me, O Lord
9. Jinriki-hon, Von der göttlichen Macht - 21. Buch der Lotos-Sutra [4:03]
Cantio Ave virgo gloriosa - Sei gegrüsset, Himmelskönigin

Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck (1562-1621):
The 150th Psalm for 8 part choir
performed by the Maulbronn Chamber Choir,
conducted by Jürgen Budday
10. Part I & Part II [3:06]
11. Part III [2:18]

Jan Sandström:
12. Gloria [8:41]
performed by the Maulbronn Chambmber Choir,
conducted by Jürgen Budday

Musica Sacra
De Maria Virgine
performed by the Moscow State Academic Choir,
conducted by Andrej Koshewnikow
13. Sergei Rachmaninov (1873-1943): Lob der Mutter Gottes [7:41]
Praise of the Mother of God (sung in Russian)
14. Giuseppe Verdi (1813-1901): Laudi alla Vergine Maria [4:13]
15. Anton Bruckner (1824-1896): Ave Maria [5:01]


Music: Concert recordings from the church
of the German UNESCO World Heritage Site Maulbronn Monastery,
recorded, produced & created by Josef-Stefan Kindler & Andreas Otto Grimminger
Josef-Stefan Kindler ~ Images, Art, Direction, Movie & Music Producer
Andreas Otto Grimminger ~ Sound Engineer & Music Producer

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

The concerts at the UNESCO World Heritage Maulbronn Monastery supply the ideal conditions for our aspirations. It is, above all, the atmosphere of the romantic, candle-lit arches, the magic of the monastery in its unadulterated sublime presence and tranquillity that impresses itself upon the performers and audience of these concerts. Renowned soloists and ensembles from the international arena repeatedly welcome the opportunity to appear here - enjoying the unparalleled acoustic and architectural beauty of this World Heritage Site, providing exquisite performances of secular and sacred music, documented by us in our Maulbronn Monastery Edition.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Intime Träumerey · German Lyrics & Music for Piano

Cover
EUR 33,00
2 CD
Franz Vorraber & Peter Härtling
Intime Träumerey

Die Einsamkeiten der Liebe bergen das schöpferische Genie

Szenen aus dem Leben Friedrich Hölderlins
im thematischen Dialog mit Werken
von Mozart, Schumann & Schubert

erzählt von Peter Härtling
Klavier: Franz Vorraber

Mitschnitt einer Aufführung im Schloss Bad Homburg 2007

DDD · Double Album · c. 111 Minutes

Previews

Art Movie(s)


Work(s) & Performance

I

ntime Träumerey: "Die Einsamkeiten der Liebe bergen das schöpferische Genie"
Bergen diese Tragiken eine Notwendigkeit? Sind sie nicht Antrieb und Basis zur Schöpfung jener Werke, die von uns heute so bewundert werden? Denken Sie an den Knaben, welcher bemüht ist, dem Wunsche des Vaters zu entsprechen, oder an den Jüngling, der sich nicht das Mädchen nimmt, nicht erobert, sondern den hehren Werten der Minne nachstrebt und dann erschreckend ob der Triebhaftigkeit seines Wesens schweigt...
Diese Einsamkeiten sind wohl die Tragik jener Dichter und Komponisten, die in ihrer eigenen, von der Gesellschaft unverstandenen Welt leben und letztlich an der Zurückweisung ihrer Sensibilität scheitern. Peter Härtling und Franz Vorraber geben uns anhand ihres thematischen Dialoges mit Szenen aus dem Leben des Dichters Friedrich Hölderlin und Werken von Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Robert Schumann und Franz Schubert einen sensiblen Einblick in diese Tiefen. Sie zeigen uns die Parallelen zwischen den Genies, deren Genres und ihren Werken - Schöpfungen, die aus diesen Einsamkeiten entstanden sind.

Josef-Stefan Kindler

H

ölderlin, die Grafschaft Homburg und die Musik
Mein Versuch, wie Hölderlin von Frankfurt nach Bad Homburg zu wandern, scheiterte an den Autobahnen. "Die Schönheiten der hiesigen Gegend", die Silberpappeln, die er liebte, würde er heute nicht mehr wiederfinden. Also fuhr ich, als ich 1975 an meinem Hölderlin-Roman schrieb, in die Stadt seines Freundes Isaak von Sinclair. "Das Städtchen liegt am Gebirge, Wälder und geschmackvolle Anlagen liegen rings herum; ich wohne gegen das Feld hinaus, habe Gärten vor dem Fenster..." schreibt er an seine Schwester Heinrike. Sinclair hatte ihm beim Glasermeister Wagner in der Haingasse Unterkunft verschafft. Ich ging seine Wege nach und ließ mich bei jedem Besuch vom Schlosspark verzaubern, dessen selbstbewusste Intimität vom Wesen der landgräflichen Familie zeugt. Vor allem die Töchter, Auguste und Marianne, fühlen sich dem Dichter verbunden. "Am Hofe hat mein Buch einigermassen Glük gemacht..."; sein "Hyperion" wurde gelesen. "Die Familie des Landgrafen besteht aus ächtedlen Menschen, die sich durch ihre Gesinnungen und ihre Lebensart von anderen ihrer Klasse ganz auffallend auszeichnen", schreibt er seiner Mutter. Dennoch hielt er auf Distanz, "aus Vorsicht und um meiner Freiheit willen."
Der Hof stellte Hölderlin ein Klavier zur Verfügung. Wahrscheinlich hat Sinclair erzählt, wie sehr sein Freund die Musik brauche und wie sehr er sie liebe. In Frankfurt hat er oft mit Susette Gontard und ihrer Freundin Marie Rätzer musiziert. Schon darum hat er sich von der Mutter aus Nürtingen seine Flöte schicken lassen. Mit Susette hat er gelegentlich in Frankfurt Konzerte besucht. Welche Musik hat er gehört? Was haben Susette, Marie und er musiziert?
In keinem seiner Briefe wird der Name des Komponisten genannt. Bis auf einen. Im Sommer 1789, in seinem ersten Jahr auf dem Stift in Tübingen, nimmt er Flötenunterricht, bei dem berühmten Konzertvirtuosen Friedrich Ludwig Dülon. Er ist, als sie sich kennenlernen, ein Jahr älter als Hölderlin, von Kindheit an blind. Er kam aus Preussen, aus Oranienburg. Schon als Zwölfjähriger reiste er, begleitet von seinem Vater, durch Europa. Hölderlins Begabung beeindruckte ihn und er attestierte ihm, bei ihm "nichts mehr lernen" zu können. Wahrscheinlich haben sie gemeinsam im Stift konzertiert. Und es ist auch anzunehmen, dass Hölderlin Dülons Stücke für Flöte spielte. Immerhin ein Komponist seiner Zeit! Dülons von Wieland 1807 veröffentlichte Autobiografie "Des blinden Flötenspielers Leben" wird Hölderlin, inzwischen Gast Ernst Zimmers im Turm am Neckar, sicher nicht in die Hände bekommen haben.
Ich war mir mit Franz Vorraber rasch einig, welche Komponisten als geistige Gefährten Hölderlins zu hören sein sollten. Mozart hat er ohne Zweifel auf der Flöte und dem Klavier gespielt, durch Dülon mit ihm vertraut. Schumann wiederum hat in jener Zeit, als das Werk Hölderlins fast vergessen war, als Sechzehnjähriger den Hyperion gelesen; und eines seiner letzten Werke, "Die Gesänge der Frühe", sind in Erinnerung an diese Lektüre, an die Erscheinung Diotimas komponiert. Und Franz Schubert mit seiner grandiosen "Wanderer-Phantasie" ist dem Wanderer Hölderlin ohnehin nahe, diesem Dichter, dessen Wanderschritt auch das Mass seiner Verse ist.

Peter Härtling

M

ozarts Rondo D-Dur, ein tänzerisch heiteres Rondo, wie es nur Mozart schreibt, wird zu Beginn des Abends seiner c-Moll Fantasie gegenübergestellt. Ein ganz anderer Geist offenbart sich in diesem wahrhaft fantasierend, teilweise rezitativisch angelegten, dunklen Stück. Mozarts c-Moll ist voller Gegensätze im Charakter und im Wechsel der Tonarten. So wie später im c-Moll Klavierkonzert endet auch die Fantasie ohne jeden Kompromiss. Beethoven hat aus dieser Mozart-Fantasie einige Motive für seine dramatische Appassionata-Sonate entnommen.
"An Diotima" nach Friedrich Hölderlin lautet der ursprüngliche Arbeitstitel von fünf Stücken Robert Schumanns, die er später Bettina von Arnim widmete. Diese Gesänge der Frühe sind das letzte veröffentlichte Klavierwerk Schumanns vor seinem Selbstmordversuch und seinem zweijährigen Aufenthalt in der Nervenheilanstalt Endenich. Schumann war sehr belesen. Hölderlin, Diotima, seine eigene Geschichte mit Clara, die zu dieser Zeit zu Ende geht, und seine Fähigkeit, Vorahnungen in Musik umzusetzen, sind wohl nicht zufällig. Die Gesänge der Frühe haben eine ganz eigene Färbung. "Das Herannahen des Morgens", wie er schreibt, die rufende Quint, erinnert sowohl an Beethovens 9. Sinfonie als auch an seine Clara-Motive in der fis-Moll Sonate, der C-Dur Fantasie oder dem Klavierkonzert. Es ist eine Hoffnung auf Licht, eingebettet in eine Harmonik, die eine Schlusswirkung oft ausspart wie bei Brucknerschen Chorälen, kombiniert mit Querbezügen zu Beethovens letzter Sonate op. 111 in den Trillerfiguren des letzten der fünf Stücke. "Die Gesänge der Frühe sind charakteristische Stücke, die die Empfindungen beim Herannahen und Wachsen des Morgens schildern, aber mehr als Gefühlsausdruck, als Malerei", schreibt Schumann an seinen Verleger. Das Morgen als innerer Traum, abseits der realen Lebensumstände, die von Krankheit, Ehekrise, Verlust der Stelle als Musikdirektor in Düsseldorf und schließlich einem Selbstmordversuch, Entmündigung und Einlieferung in eine Anstalt gezeichnet sind. Dieses Morgen widmet Robert Schumann den idealen Frauengestalten Diotima, Bettina und seiner eigenen Frau Clara in Erinnerung einer idealen Liebe, mit Motiven aus der jugendlichen fis-Moll Sonate, die er fast 20 Jahre zuvor geschrieben hat. Sein Lebenswerk ist vollbracht. Ein befreiendes Verklingen macht die Gesänge der Frühe zu einem außergewöhnlichen Zeugnis seines Komponierens gegenüber seinem Schicksal - einem inneren Traum, den die Musik erhöht.
Franz Schuberts Ges-Dur Impromptu verwendet das "Wanderer-Motiv" leicht verändert in einer abgeklärten Stimmung. Es ist ein Spätwerk, das er in seinem letzten Lebensjahr geschrieben hat. Die zahlreichen harmonisch subtilen Wendungen lassen ein kleines kostbares Stück entstehen, das aber trotzdem den rhythmisch unerbittlichen, aber leisen Fluss des Werkes nie unterbricht.
Schuberts Wanderer-Fantasie ist 1822 bis 1823 entstanden. Zur selben Zeit schreibt Beethoven seine letzte Sonate op. 111. "Die Sonne dünkt mich hier so kalt", lautet der Text der Liedzeile des Schubert-Liedes "Der Wanderer", das dem Thema des 2. Satzes zugrunde liegt, welches den zentralen Variationssatz des Werkes bildet. Es ist ein kühnes, bis zu dieser Zeit einzigartiges Werk, dessen vier Sätze aus einem einzigen rhythmischen Motiv aufgebaut sind und das ohne Pause zu einem Ganzen zusammengesetzt ist. Obwohl der Titel "Wanderer-Fantasie" nicht von Schubert stammt, liegt durch den thematischen Kern der Bezug zum Lied "Der Wanderer" nahe. Dieses rhythmisch prägnante Fortschreiten findet sich zudem häufig in Schuberts Werken, etwa in der Winterreise oder den Moments musicaux. Das Wandern ohne Unterlass, ohne Halt, das unaufhörliche Fließen reißt alles mit sich. Vielleicht wird es durch den Traum unterbrochen, aber dieser unbändigen Kraft können wir uns nicht entziehen, und sie fordert letztlich eine Entscheidung. So erklingt dieses Werk am Schluss des Abends als Schuberts Ruf an den am Ende sich selbst unendlich fernen Hölderlin: "Ich bin Dir nah!" - dem ewigen Wanderer, der Du in Deinem einzigartigen Leben warst, das an der Einsamkeit des wahrhaft Liebenden zerbrach.

Franz Vorraber

D

urch Heinrich von Kleists Drama "Prinz Friedrich von Homburg" ist die ehemalige Residenz der Landgrafen von Hessen-Homburg vor den Toren Frankfurts weltbekannt geworden. Das Schloss mit seinen wundervollen Gärten gehört wohl zu den schönsten Barockanlagen Deutschlands. Es ist daher nicht verwunderlich, dass die preußischen Könige und deutschen Kaiser, wohl auch wegen der erholsamen Lustbarkeiten in dem durch seine Heilquellen schon damals berühmten Bad "Homburg vor der Höhe", zwischen 1866 und 1918 nur zu gerne des Sommers hier verweilten. Selbst der Prince of Wales nebst höchstem englischen und russischen Adel suchte hier Kurzweil, Erholung und Heilung.
Die Kultur war an den Höfen Europas schon immer sehr facettenreich. Der gebildete Adel wusste um die Notwendigkeit der Förderung und Pflege der schönen Künste und schuf somit die Basis der Atmosphäre Europa. Vieles, was in bildender Kunst, Literatur und Musik keinen vordergründigen, marktwirtschaftlichen Wert besaß, fand Beachtung und Bewunderung und bildete die Grundlage unserer heutigen kulturellen Existenz und Identität. So ist es dem Mäzen Isaak von Sinclair zu verdanken, dass das Dichtergenie Friedrich Hölderlin künstlerisch entscheidende Jahre seines tragischen Lebens in Homburg verbrachte. Dem Landgrafen Friedrich V. widmete Hölderlin sein wohl bekanntestes Gedicht "Patmos". Eine Bronzeplatte mit dessen Anfangsversen bedeckt heute den Zugang zur Familiengruft der Homburger Landgrafen, die sich unter dem Chorraum der Schlosskirche befindet. Erhaltenswertes und hörenswert Neues, musikalische Kostbarkeiten aus Tradition und Avantgarde - beides undenkbar ohne den Nährboden Europa - dokumentieren wir in der Serie "Castle Concerts" an authentischer Stelle. Kaiser Wilhelm II. schuf in Bad Homburg durch die Stiftung einer Stadtkirche, wohl ohne es zu ahnen einen der schönsten und intimsten Konzertsäle Europas. Denn die bis dahin genutzte Schlosskirche mit ihrer prächtigen Bürgy-Orgel geriet in Vergessenheit und überstand somit die Wirren und den Modernisierungswahn des letzten Jahrhunderts - bis sich das "Kuratorium Bad Homburger Schlosskirche" dank modernem Mäzenatentum dieses architektonischen Kleinods annehmen konnte: Originalgetreu mit behutsamer Liebe zum Detail wurden Kirche und Orgel zu einem wundervollen Konzertsaal restauriert. Heute erstrahlt die Schlosskirche in neuem Glanz und wird durch die mit viel Engagement und Enthusiasmus veranstaltete Konzertreihe "Castle Concerts" mit musikalischen Höhepunkten fürstlich geschmückt.

Performer(s)

B

orn in Graz (Austria), Franz Vorraber has been fascinated by the piano since his early childhood. At the age of seven, he played the organ in church standing up - as he could hardly reach the pedals. At the age of thirteen, he was admitted to the piano class for exceptional students at the Music Conservatory in Graz, also learning the violin. The Viennese School in the tradition of Bruno Seidlhofer and the traditional German school of Wilhelm Kempff, handed down by Joachim Volkmann, dominated his study years. He has won many prizes for his skills on the piano. Here, just some of the awarders: the Austrian Culture Minister, the piano manufacturers Bösendorfer in Vienna and the city of Graz. He also won the Joachim Erhard prize. He completed his studies in Frankfurt and Graz receiving unanimously the highest awards. His greatest project has been the cyclical performance of Robert Schumann's complete piano works in a total of twelve evenings in different cities in Europe and Japan. The press and the public have repeatedly acclaimed him as one of the most important interpreters of Schumann in our times. He has recorded these works on a series of thirteen CDs for which he was awarded Austrian Broadcasting's Pasticcio prize in 2006. Despite all these prizes, other criteria are pivotal in Franz Vorraber's concerts: his enormous expressive force as a musician and his ability to expose the essential core of the music fascinate his public. He leaves his listeners emotionally moved. Since his debut in Tokyo at the age of 19, he has received many invitations to almost all the European countries, America and Japan, where he also holds master classes.

B

orn in Chemnitz (Germany) in 1933, Peter Härtling moved to the Swabian Nürtingen in 1946 after spending time in Saxony, Moravia and Austria. He started his journalistic work after school in 1952 at a small Swabian newspaper first, later then as literary editor at the "Deutsche Zeitung" (German Newspaper) in Stuttgart and Cologne from 1955 till 1962. After that, from 1962 till 1970, he worked as co-publisher of the newspaper "Der Monat" (The Month) in Berlin and started in 1967 as chief editor of the "S. Fischer Verlag", where he was appointed managing director in 1973. Since 1974 Peter Härtling has worked as freelance writer. There are many awarded works among his published poems, essays, novels and short stories since 1953, that have been translated into more than twenty languages, for example the "Deutscher Bücherpreis" (German Book Prize) 2003 or the "Corine Ehrenpreis" (Corine Honored Award) 2007. Peter Härtling is particularly well known for his novel-biographies of great poets and musicians such as Friedrich Hölderlin, Franz Schubert, Robert Schumann, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Fanny Hensel. In the years 2000 and 2001 he was president of the "Hölderlin Gesellschaft" (Hölderlin Society).

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

Music that is new, pieces worth listening to and well worth conserving, little treasures from the traditional and the avantgarde - music that is unimaginable anywhere else but in the hotbed of Europe - we capture these in our Castle Concerts Series of recordings in their original settings in cooperation with Volker Northoff.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

Works, Movements & Tracklist

Disc 1

Peter Härtling (born 1933):
1. "Hölderlin - Wie hat er geliebt?"

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
2. Rondo for Piano in D Major, K. 485

Peter Härtling:
3. "Die erste Liebe"

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791):
4. Phantasy for Piano in D Minor, K. 475

Peter Härtling:
5. "Ein Abschied von den Gontards"

Robert Schumann (1810-1856):
6. Gesänge der Frühe, Op. 133

Disc 2

Peter Härtling:
1. "Hölderlin - Ein Wanderer der deutschen Literatur"

Peter Härtling:
2. "Die Prinzessin"

Franz Schubert (1797-1828):
3. Impromptu in G-Flat Major, Op. 90 No. 3 (D 899/3)

Peter Härtling:
4. "Hölderlins Wahnsinn"

Franz Schubert (1797-1828):
5. Phantasy in C Major, Op. 15 (D 760)
"Wanderer-Fantasie"

DEBUSSY: Images for Piano, Book 2 (L 111)

Track

Cover
EUR 2,85
Claude Debussy (1862-1918):
Images for Piano Solo, Book 2 (L 111)

Performed by Severin von Eckardstein (Piano)
Instrument: C. Bechstein Concert Grand Piano D 280
A concert recording from the Philharmonia Mercatorhalle
in Duisburg (Germany)

HD Recording · DDD · Duration: 13 Min. 06 Sec.
Digital Album · 3 Tracks · incl. Booklet

MP3

MP3 Album

320 kBit/sec.

Performer(s)

S

everin von Eckardstein was born in 1978 in Düsseldorf, Germany. He took his first piano lessons when he was six years old. At the age of 12 he was accepted into Barbara Szczepanska's young talent class at the Robert Schumann Musikhochschule in Dusseldorf. During his school years, von Eckardstein continued his piano studies in Hannover and in Salzburg with Karl-Heinz Kaemmerling. After his graduation from high school, he attended the Universität der Künste, Berlin, to take lessons with Klaus Hellwig. Following his degree in 2002, he continued his studies also at the International Piano Academy Lake Como, Italy.
Von Eckardstein won numerous competitions, both national and international ones. Among these are the Hamburg Steinway Competition (1st prize in 1990), the Incontro Internazionale Giovani Pianisti in Italy (1st prize in 1991), the Feruccio-Busoni Competition in Bozen (1998), and the ARD Competition in Munich (2nd prize in 1999). In 2000, von Eckardstein received the third prize and in addition the special prize for best interpretation of contemporary music at the Leeds International Piano Competition. Many of the music critics that were present at the time, unanimously chose Severin von Eckardstein as their winner.
In June 2003 Severin von Eckardstein won the first prize at the highly prestigious international Queen Elisabeth Competition in Brussels. During the final round of the competition, he gave a phenomenal performance of works by Beethoven and Prokofiev. This combination certainly shows the amazing versatility of this young master pianist.
Meanwhile he has played on many great stages in the world. Among others he gave highly appreciated concerts in Berlin, Munich, London, New York, Miami, Amsterdam, Tokyo and Seoul. Prestigious festivals invited him, such as "Klavier Festival Ruhr", the "Aldeburgh Festival", "La Roque d'Anthéron" in France and the "Gilmore Festival", Michigan/USA.
Having participated several times in the series "Meesterpianisten" in the Concertgebouw Amsterdam, von Eckardstein just opened the Jubilee Concert of this top-class piano series which has been existing for 25 years by now.

Series & Edition

P

ublishing Authentic Classical Concerts entails for us capturing and recording outstanding performances and concerts for posterity. The performers, audience, opus and room enter into an intimate dialogue that in its form and expression, its atmosphere, is unique and unrepeatable. It is our aim, the philosophy of our house, to enable the listener to acutely experience every facet of this symbiosis, the intensity of the performance, so we record the concerts in direct 2-Track Stereo digital HD. The results are unparalleled interpretations of musical and literary works, simply - audiophile snapshots of permanent value. Flourishing culture, enthralling the audience and last but not least also you the listener, are the values we endeavor to document in our editions and series.

The concert grand piano is incontestably the king of instruments. We could now wax lyrical about its incomparable dynamics and go into its ability to go from the tenderest of sounds in a soft minor key to the magnificent power of a fortissimo, or I could rhapsodise about its impressive size and elegance. But what makes this instrument really fascinating is its individuality, since each one is unique in itself - created by a master. A concert grand has a life all of its own that a virtuoso can really "get into" and hence bring the work of the composer to life. In our Grand Piano Masters Series, we get into the character and soul of the concert grand piano and experience, during the performance itself, the dialogue between the instrument, the virtuoso and the performance space.

Andreas Otto Grimminger & Josef-Stefan Kindler, K&K Verlagsanstalt

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Brilliant piece! Wonderful interpretation!

Wonderful interpretation! What a brilliant piece by a brilliant composer. Debussy's music is "Food for the ears of the Gods".

Brian McCarthy on YouTube

Review

HI-RES AUDIO

Awarded by Qobuz with the HI-RES AUDIO

November 2012

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