Florian Heyerick – Graupner: Complete Cantatas for two sopranos and bass (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 48 kHz]

Florian Heyerick – Graupner: Complete Cantatas for two sopranos and bass (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 48 kHz]

Experience the beauty and depth of Graupner’s Complete Cantatas for two sopranos and bass, performed by the Kirchheimer BachConsort under the baton of Florian Heyerick, now available on CPO Records. With its intricate vocal harmonies and lush instrumental accompaniment, this collection of cantatas showcases the composer’s immense talent and creative vision. Featuring breathtaking performances by the Kirchheimer BachConsort and the exquisite vocal prowess of Marie Luise Werneburg, Hanna Zumsande, and Dominik Wörner, this album is a must-listen for lovers of baroque music.

Europäisches Hanse-Ensemble – Musik der Hansestädte, Vol. 1: Musik aus dem alten Stralsund (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Europäisches Hanse-Ensemble – Musik der Hansestädte, Vol. 1: Musik aus dem alten Stralsund (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

The Stralsund skyline with its brick church towers rises impressively above Strela Sound. While today this view can mainly be seen by those who approach Stralsund via the Rügen Bridge, the city has appeared in this way to arriving seafarers since the Middle Ages. As one of the Hanseatic cities lined up like pearls on southern Baltic Sea beaches, Stralsund had achieved a degree of economic prosperity as a member of the Hanseatic League since the 13th century. Closely networked with other Hanseatic cities such as Lübeck, Wismar and Rostock and governed by councillors and mayors from the upper class of merchants, the Hanseatic League not only guaranteed economic security but also facilitated cultural exchange. In the 15th and 16th centuries, the alliance gradually disintegrated due to growing European competition. However, Stralsund remained a city of trade and Baltic exchange.

Elena Harsanyi, Elvira Bill, Mirko Ludwig, Andreas Wolf, Kölner Akademie, Michael Alexander Willens – Two Passion Oratorios (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 96 kHz]

Elena Harsanyi, Elvira Bill, Mirko Ludwig, Andreas Wolf, Kölner Akademie, Michael Alexander Willens – Two Passion Oratorios (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 96 kHz]

“The Passion music Johann David Heinichen wrote for the Dresden court is a document of cultural and confessional openness of the Saxon residence, and his two Italian oratorios heard here are surrogates of large-scale Passion music. “”Come? S’imbruna il ciel”” – composed in 1728 – is the latest of the sepolcri, his other Passion “”L’aride tempie ignude”” the first of the sepolcri to survive from Heinichen in Dresden. Both texts are by Stefano Pallavicino, who had been active at the Dresden court since 1719. In the first-mentioned Passion, the meditation on the Passion event recurs to the experience of the earthquake that, according to biblical accounts, occurred immediately after the death of Jesus. The description of the violent natural events gives Mary the Mother of God, John (Jesus’ favorite disciple), and Mary Magdalene an opportunity to reflect on their relationship to the Crucified. Different aspects of affection and love are thematized. The meditation on the Passion event in the second-named Passion is designed as an allegorical play of death (Morte) and hope (Speranza), divine love (Amor divino) and penance (Poenitenza), and follows an easily comprehensible dramaturgy. The affinity to opera seria is evident in both passions not only in the arrangement of the pieces. The keys, gestures and instrumentation also correspond to the models familiar from baroque musical theater. Full of affect!

Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Lukasz Borowicz – Alfvén: Symphonic Works, Vol. 3 (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 48 kHz]

Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Lukasz Borowicz – Alfvén: Symphonic Works, Vol. 3 (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 48 kHz]

During his lifetime, Hugo Alfvén became known as one of Sweden’s principal composers of his time, with works that struck a chord with a wide audience. As a result of his popularity, a nationwide collection was held in celebration of his 70th birthday in 1942, with the proceeds used to build Alfvéngården, the composer’s home during his final years. Now, 80 years later, Elin Rombo and Peter Friis Johansson are releasing their tribute to Alfvén’s 150th anniversary, recorded at Alfvéngården using the composer’s own piano. Alfvén is primarily known for his orchestral music – including the ubiquitous Swedish Rhapsody No. 1 – and as a composer of choral music. As befits the setting, the focus of the present disc is on more intimate works, however – namely songs and piano pieces. Some of the pieces are closely related to the venue – Fyra låtar från Leksand (Four Tunes from Leksand) is a piano version of folk tunes collected from a local fiddler and Så tag mit hjerte (‘So take my heart’), Alfvén’s most frequently performed song, was composed there in 1946 as a present to his wife.

Duo Dauenhauer Kuen – Max Bruch: Swedish and Russian Dances (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 48 kHz]

Duo Dauenhauer Kuen – Max Bruch: Swedish and Russian Dances (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 48 kHz]

The symphonic compositions of Max Bruch featured on this disc show his clear love for the lied. Whether you’re listening to the Serenade after Swedish Folk Melodies, the highly imaginative and colorful Orchestral Suites on Swedish Dances, or the Suite after Russian Folk Songs, Bruch always enchants the senses with his depictions of romantic musical landscapes.

David Castro-Balbi – Johann Stamitz: Three Violin Concertos & Symphony (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

David Castro-Balbi – Johann Stamitz: Three Violin Concertos & Symphony (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

Johann Stamitz is considered the father of the Mannheim School and thus the founder of modern classical orchestral music. At the beginning of our century, Hugo Riemann even described him as Haydn’s long-sought predecessor, who was to fill the unseemly gaping hole between the so completely different styles of the Baroque and Classical periods with a certain exclusivity. In the compositional output of Johann’s two famous sons Anton and Carl Stamitz, solo concertos and concertante symphonies occupy a large place. As virtuosos on their instruments, they created compositions not least for their own use. Surprisingly, however, only a few concertos by Johann Stamitz have survived, most of them violin concertos that are indebted to the model of the instrumental concerto developed by Antonio Vivaldi. The fast first movements are in ritornello form, i.e., the succession of tutti ritornellos and violin solo episodes. Technically demanding are the double stops and chords combined with wide leaps in the first movement of the second concerto. Polyphonic, polyphonic playing on the violin seems to have been an absolute speciality of the violinist Johann Stamitz.

David & Alexandre Castro-Balbi, Deutsche Staatsphilharmonie Rheinland-Pfalz, Kevin Griffiths – Brandl: Orchestral Works (2020) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

David & Alexandre Castro-Balbi, Deutsche Staatsphilharmonie Rheinland-Pfalz, Kevin Griffiths – Brandl: Orchestral Works (2020) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

When Johann Evangelist Brandl wrote his Symphonie concertante op. 20, he had more time to concentrate on composing free of court occasions and to exploit in full his own capabilities rather than focusing on the planning and performing of concerts. Therefore his Symphonie concertante, like the one by Mozart, can be viewed as a sort of visiting card, and with it Brandl wanted to put out his feelers in quest of new appointments. Like Mozart, in his work with two solo instruments Brandl has the dimensions of the first movement noticeably expand in view of the solo concerto and in this way gives both soloists space and time to present all the themes and motifs in succession as well as to elaborate them with great virtuosity. What our two soloists, the Castro-Balbi brothers, display in breathtaking virtuosity is simply sensational. Brandl had composed his four-movement Symphony in D major with a dazzling finale as a »Grande Simphonie à grand Orchestre« some ten years earlier. Already then Brandl anticipated a lot of Beethoven’s Fourth Symphony op. 60, which first was completed in 1806. Something of the quest for new sound worlds that the Rhinelander Beethoven envisioned is also in evidence in Brandl, who was ten years his senior. Today musicologists are discovering in Brandl an artist whose musical language above all toward the end of his creative career surmounted the style of Classicism and instead favored a sharpened chromaticism and already exhibited Early Romantic characteristics.

Constanze Quartet – Emilie Mayer: String Quartets Vol. 1 (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Constanze Quartet – Emilie Mayer: String Quartets Vol. 1 (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Emilie Mayer was a German composer, sculptor, and co-director of the Berlin Opera, whose instrumental works were frequently performed in Germany and Central Europe . Born in Friedland, Mecklenburg, on May 14, 1821; died in Berlin on April 10, 1883.

Carsten Wiebusch – Franck: Complete Organ Works (2022) [FLAC 24 bit, 48 kHz]

Carsten Wiebusch – Franck: Complete Organ Works (2022) [FLAC 24 bit, 48 kHz]

An outstanding edition of César Franck’s complete organ works on the occasion of the 200th birthday. The perception of César Franck as an organ composer centers on his twelve large-scale works, which are considered among the most radiant contributions to organ literature. However, it should not be forgotten that with the collection L’Organiste he wrote 63 shorter, but compositionally very elaborate pieces, which due to their vignette-like, compact facture do not reach the complexity of his “large” organ works, but are nevertheless very remarkable: each one of the pieces has a signature all its own, and is in no way inferior to Franck’s extensive organ works in terms of harmonic complexity and focus of expression.

Benjamin Appl, Jenaer Philharmonie, Simon Gaudenz – Wolf: Orchesterlieder & Penthesilea (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 96 kHz]

Benjamin Appl, Jenaer Philharmonie, Simon Gaudenz – Wolf: Orchesterlieder & Penthesilea (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 96 kHz]

I am too cowardly to be a proper composer, Hugo Wolf confessed to a Viennese friend when he was barely 28 years old. And the result of his introspection was not so wrong: everything in his life, not only composing, proceeded in explosive spurts. He wandered through the deepest emotional valleys, suddenly flew up into the highest regions, suffered agonies when he couldn’t think of anything to say, shouted his enthusiasm about a successful piece to the whole world and still managed to produce a respectable, albeit fragmentary oeuvre, from which the early poem Penthesilea after Heinrich von Kleist’s tragedy of the same name stands out as a symphonic masterpiece. The Austrian baritone Benjamin Appl and the Jena Philharmonic Orchestra, led by its principal conductor Simon Gaudenz, have prefaced this highly dramatic monolith with twelve selected songs, most of which were orchestrated by their author himself: a dozen small, finely polished gems based on texts by Goethe, Mörike and Heyse, whose subtle arrangements leave no doubt that Hugo Wolf would certainly have had the makings of a “proper composer”. Whether then, of course, the ingenious things would have been created that posterity owes to him – that is another matter.

Bawandi Trio – Robert Kahn & Vincent d’Indy: Trios for Piano, Clarinet & Cello (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 192 kHz]

Bawandi Trio – Robert Kahn & Vincent d’Indy: Trios for Piano, Clarinet & Cello (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 192 kHz]

For the project of the newly founded clarinet trio called “Bawandi” the three young musicians Mario Haring, Alexandre Castro-Balbi and Patrick Hollich came together. They designed a diverse, highly interesting program with a clear focus, namely the rediscovery and reinterpretation of the works of two composers who had fallen into oblivion: the Jewish Robert Kahn, who had fled into exile, and Cesar Franck’s successor as president at the Societe de National de Musique Vincent d’Indy. Both Kahn and d’Indy were recognized and highly esteemed composers during their lifetimes, but due to the circumstances of their environment – as different as both personalities and circumstances were – they became less important. Both composers deserve to be looked at from a new perspective. That is why this new production was created on the highest musical level. A young ensemble that deserves full attention.

Brandenburgisches Staatsorchester Frankfurt, Ernst Theis – Paul Lincke: Overtures, Vol. 1 (2022) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Brandenburgisches Staatsorchester Frankfurt, Ernst Theis – Paul Lincke: Overtures, Vol. 1 (2022) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

At last I have fulfilled a wish: The production of melody-saturated overtures and waltzes by Paul Lincke. It is also an overdue rehabilitation of the composer Lincke, who certainly wrote more than just the “Berliner Luft”. Of course, that is included in our Vol 1, and it is certainly not due to the rhymes of Heinrich Bolten-Baeckers that this march has become the unofficial Berlin anthem and has remained so to this day. It is Paul Lincke’s music, whose unashamed catchiness “overtakes you”, as his first biographer, the composer Edmund Nick, wrote: “Only a genuine Berliner like Lincke was capable of making a declaration of love to his father city in this way. All the softer emotions that move the Berlin heart are included in it.” Irrespective of such clichéd attributions, Paul Lincke founded something with works like this that had never existed before: Berlin’s own popular music. And like Franz Lehár, Paul Lincke was a master of instrumentation, but remained true to the classical orchestral movement, like his models Jacques Offenbach and Franz von Suppé. And he took special care with overtures, whether to a farce or an operetta, whereas most Viennese operettas of the time had to make do with a short prelude. Look forward to many Lincke discoveries!

Bejun Mehta – Carl Heinrich Graun: Silla (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Bejun Mehta – Carl Heinrich Graun: Silla (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

The opera based on the libretto by Frederick the Great will be staged as a co–production of the Rheinsberg Castle Easter Festival and the Innsbrucker Festwochen der Alten Musik in Innsbruck in 2022 and in Rheinsberg the following year – for the first time in almost 240 years.

Boston Early Music Festival Orchestra – Henry Desmarest: Circé (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Boston Early Music Festival Orchestra – Henry Desmarest: Circé (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

The latest release from the outstanding Boston Early Music Festival (BEMF) is devoted to the monumental opera Circé by Henry Desmarest. Lully’s death in 1687 was a defining moment in the history of French opera. Until then, his dominance in tragédie en musique was almost as great as Louis XIV’s dominance in French politics. The 1690s then saw a veritable explosion of new voices on the French operatic stage – both among composers and librettists. Some composers, such as Pascal Colasse, sought to maintain the closest possible proximity to Lully’s model, while others, such as Charpentier, Marais, Campra, Desmarest, and their librettists, betrayed a voice and vision all their own from the beginning. More recently, BEMF became aware of the composer Henry Desmarest and the fact that he wrote his first two tragedies in 1693 and 1694 on texts by Louise-Geneviève Gillot de Saintonge, the first librettist in the field of tragédie en musique. BEMF chose Circé (1694), the second of these works – partly because of the quality of the score and partly because Desmarest and Saintonge had clearly been inspired by the artistic success Charpentier and his librettist Thomas Corneille achieved with their Médée of 1693.

Ardinghello Ensemble – Gyrowetz: Flute Quartets, Op. 37 (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz]

Ardinghello Ensemble – Gyrowetz: Flute Quartets, Op. 37 (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz]

Adalbert Gyrowetz is one of the numerous, highly talented Czech musicians of the 18th century who received an excellent education in Prague and then turned to the musical centers of Europe. His music is strongly influenced by the classical language of Haydn. Architectural structures, harmonic progressions of tension, instrumentation, disposition of a cycle, representation of affect, and the general idea of music as a balanced language of feeling and reason dominate the aesthetics of this style. The quartets for flute and string trio are all in three movements with the tempo sequence fast-slow-fast. Around 1800 this was rather the exception, since Haydn’s mature string quartets had established four movements. The duration of the pieces is about the same as the total duration of a “normal” four-movement chamber work of the time. In addition, it is interesting that the voices, especially those of the flute, violin, but also viola and cello, feature rapid and virtuosic solos. Gyrowetz thus writes a cycle of three lively quartets that want to be nothing more than virtuoso divertissements and amusements with esprit. The composer has succeeded in this!

Anne Stadler – Baroque Christmas Cantatas from Central Germany II (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 96 kHz]

Anne Stadler – Baroque Christmas Cantatas from Central Germany II (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 96 kHz]

One of my indispensable Christmas CDs from my own production is the “Mitteldeutsche Weihnacht” with the Saxon Vocal Ensemble under Matthias Jung (CD 3116463). At my special request, the same ensemble has now recorded a new selection of Christmas treasures from one of the most important collections of Protestant church music from the St. Augustin princely and state school in Grimma in central Saxony for cpo. The focus is once again on magnificent, festive church cantatas (mostly with Christmassy trumpet splendor) by composers from Central Germany who were also well-known musicians in leading positions from the period before and after 1700. To name just a few: Johann Schelle, Philipp Heinrich Erlebach and of course Johann Rosenmüller, but also the composers whose names are no longer known today, such as Christian Liebe or Gottfried Vogel, command the greatest admiration for their compositional skills.

Andreea Chira – The Magic of the Pan Flute (2022) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Andreea Chira – The Magic of the Pan Flute (2022) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Antonio Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons is a milestone in music. On the one hand, the cycle is firmly anchored in baroque aesthetics, on the other hand, one is already moving in the direction of the galant style. In our new recording, Vivaldi’s works have been carefully arranged for pan flute with orchestra by the composer Carlos Pino-Quintana. The great challenge was to maintain or even emphasise polyphonic elements of the original solo part in the new instrumentation, to subtly transfer the technical characteristics of the violin to the pan flute, to find adequate keys, and to balance the resulting contrasts and timbres between solo and tutti in the sense of concerto grosso.