Matthias Höfs, Hamburg Philharmonic Soloists - Trumpet Acrobatics (2015)

  • 10 May, 11:13
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Artist:
Title: Trumpet Acrobatics
Year Of Release: 2015
Label: Es-Dur
Genre: Classical
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 01:01:36
Total Size: 263 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. Carmen-Fantasie (Arr. For Trumpet and Salon Orchestra)
02. Concert Etude, Op. 49 (Arr. For Trumpet and Salon Orchestra)
03. El Pasodoble y Olé! (Arr. for Trumpet and Salon Orchestra)
04. Concert Piece No. 1 in F Minor, Op. 11 (Arr. For Trumpet and Salon Orchestra)
05. Hora Staccato (Arr. For Trumpet and Salon Orchestra)
06. Fantaisie and Variations on the Carnival of Venice (Arr. For Trumpet and Salon Orchestra)
07. How Do You Keep the Music Playing? (Arr. For Trumpet and Salon Orchestra)
08. L'Histoire du Tango (Arr. for Trumpet and Salon Orchestra)
09. Variations on George Gershwin's Summertime (Arr. For Trumpet and Salon Orchestra)

Daring jumps, breath-taking tempi: Trumpet Acrobatics! The ease and elegance with which leading German trumpeter Matthias Höfs surmounts the musical and technical challenges of the entertaining pieces on this CD - his second for the ES-Dur label - is captivating.

Accompanied by the Hamburg Philharmonic Soloists, the music Höfs performs includes confections such as Bizet’s Carmen-Fantasie, the Concert Piece No.1 in F minor by Willy Brandt, Fantaisie and Variations on ‘The Carnival of Venice’ by Jean-Baptiste Arban, Dinicu’s Hora Staccato, L’Histoire du Tango by Astor Piazzolla, and ‘How Do You Keep the Music Playing?’ by Michel Legrand.

In the first third of the 19th century the salon established itself as a reception room in high-society homes and amongst the aristocracy. The term ‘salon music’ first became its own genre of music in 1830 in such rooms, meaning music that is fascinating, effecting, melodious and virtuosic. By the mid-century the repertoire grew to include arrangements of famous pieces and adaptations of beloved opera arias. ETA Hoffmann described such light music as something to be taken “by this beautiful world as comfortably as tea”.

Salon orchestras emerged in their own right in the three major musical centres of Europe - Paris, Vienna and Berlin. The piano trio formed its core: piano, violin and cello. The instrumentation presented here from the Hamburg Philharmonic Soloists is almost identical to the salon music of this period: flute, oboe, clarinet, solo trumpet instead of cornet, trombone, string quartet, double-bass, piano and percussion.

The arrangements - specifically written for this CD - come from Stephan Pfeiffer, Boris Brinkmann, Peter Lawrence and Matthias Höfs himself.