Florilegium - Bach Cantata / Triple Concerto - Telemann Concerto (2008) [DSD64 / Hi-Res]

  • 07 Mar, 03:52
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Artist:
Title: Bach Cantata / Triple Concerto - Telemann Concerto
Year Of Release: 2008
Label: Channel Classics Records
Genre: Classical
Quality: DSD64 (*.dsf) / FLAC (tracks) 192/24
Total Time: 1:08:21
Total Size: 2.7 / 1.56 GB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

Concerto In A-Minor From Tafelmusik Part 1
01. Largo Telemann 04:22
02. Allegro Telemann 08:20
03. Gratios Telemann 03:38
04. Allegro Telemann 08:32

Cantata ''Non Sa Che Sia Dolore''
05. Sinfonia Bach 06:17
06. Recitative ''Non Sa Che Sia Dolore'' Bach 00:55
07. Aria ''Parti Pur, E Con Dolore'' Bach 08:31
08. Recitative ''Tuo Saver Al Temp e l'eta Contrasta'' Bach 00:32
09. Aria _Ricetti Gramezza E Paverno_ Bach 05:39

Triple Concerto In A-Minor
10. Allegro Bach 08:39
11. Adiago, Ma Non Tanto, E Doce Bach 05:50
12. Allabreve Bach 07:01

At the time of Johann Kuhnau’s succession to the post of Cantor of St.Thomas’ Church, on the death of the previous incumbent, Johann Schelle, in March 1701, Georg Philipp Telemann’s presence in Leipzig was not without irritation to the newly appointed Cantor. Although ostensibly a law student, Telemann’s compositions had so impressed one of the city’s Burgomasters that he was rewarded with a fortnightly commission for St.Thomas’, to be accompanied by ‘ample remuneration’. Perhaps noting Telemann’s own observation of Kuhnau – ‘his frail constitution leads one to expect his early death’ – the council reassured the twenty-one year old student of his suitability for the post. Defying all predictions, however, they had to wait over twenty years for a similar opportunity. Kuhnau died on 5th June 1722. Telemann was by this time a musician of considerable repute, established in Hamburg. There were five initial applicants for the newly vacant post, including Telemann. The Leipzig council weren’t going to let him slip the net a second time, and, after complying with his request to be exempted from teaching Latin, he was unanimously elected to the post. Whether Telemann gave serious consideration to the post or not remains unclear, but following the success of his petition to the Hamburg city council for a pay increase, he declined the position. After a second election in 1723, the Darmstadt court capellmeister Christoph Graupner was appointed, but when he failed to obtain release from his employer, Johann Sebastian Bach took his place. And so the two great composers’ paths crossed; yet the different directions their lives would take was evident from early on: for Telemann the new galant style, for Bach the perfecting of his contrapunctal skills….. When Johann Sebastian Bach was appointed Kantor in 1723 to the church of St Thomas, Leipzig, he may have hoped to augment his salary by regular commissions for the composition of secular cantatas for special occasions. But in the event, his expectations were only partially realised. The few commissions Bach received were for royal occasions, such as birthdays, a royal visit to Leipzig by King August III of Poland, homages to University professors and weddings….