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			Georg Philipp TELEMANN (1681 - 1767)
 
              Tafelmusik  
              Production I  
              Ouverture in e minor [30:25]  
              Quatuor in G [12:25]  
              Concerto in A [24:01]  
              Trio in E flat [13:01]  
              Solo in b minor [11:45]  
              Conclusion in e minor [04:28]  
              Production II  
              Ouverture in D [28:37]  
              Quatuor in d minor [14:23]  
              Concerto in F [13:43]  
              Trio in e minor [12:12]  
              Solo in A [12:55]  
              Conclusion in D [6:09]  
              Production III  
              Ouverture in B flat [25:05]  
              Quatuor in e minor [8:03]  
              Concerto in E flat [14:49]  
              Trio in D [8:44]  
              Solo in g minor [9:20]  
              Conclusion in B flat [1:44]  
             
            Musica antiqua Köln (Michael Schneider (recorder), Jed Wentz, Cordula Breuer (transverse flute), Michael Niesemann, Eberhard Zummach (oboe), Friedemann Immer (trumpet), Andrew Joy, Charles Putnam (horn), Reinhard Goebel, Manfred Krämer, Florian Deuter, Andrea Keller, Werner Ehrhardt, Gustavo Zarba (violin), Karlheinz Steeb, Laura Johnson (viola), Phoebe Carrai (cello), Jonathan Cable (violone), Thierry Maeder (harpsichord))/Reinhard Goebel
 
			rec. April, June 1988, Studio of Deutschlandfunk, Cologne, Germany. DDD
 
             
            ARCHIV 477 8714   [4 CDs: 67:07 + 58:10 + 59:52 + 68:16]  
			 
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                  Comparison: Freiburger Barockorchester (Harmonia mundi, 
                  2010)  
                   
                  Georg Philipp Telemann was the most fashionable composer of 
                  his time. It seems that he is no less fashionable these days. 
                  In the last couple of years a remarkable number of Telemann 
                  discs - both new and reissued - have been released. The day 
                  when he was considered a composer of light and catchy tunes 
                  and when his large output was used against him has gone. More 
                  and more musicians are discovering his great creativity and 
                  his crucial role in music history.  
                   
                  The Tafelmusik collection is a good example of his 
                  art. Telemann's reputation was such that it was welcomed with 
                  enthusiasm. "Lovers of music can expect in the coming 1733rd 
                  year a great instrumental work from the pen of Telemann. It 
                  consists of nine heavy pieces with 7, and again of so many light 
                  ones with 1, 2, 3, to 4 instruments.... Publication will take 
                  place on three occasions, namely Ascension, Michaelmas and Christmas. 
                  The names of the subscribers are to be printed with the work." 
                  Thus an advertisement in a Hamburg newspaper. The price was 
                  considerable, but that didn't have a negative effect on the 
                  response. No less than 206 copies were ordered in advance, from 
                  all over Europe. Subscribers included famous masters like Johann 
                  Joachim Quantz, Johann Georg Pisendel and Michel Blavet. George 
                  Frideric Handel was also among them: he was a personal friend 
                  of Telemann, and Handel would not be Handel if he hadn't used 
                  some ideas from this collection for his own compositions.  
                   
                  Telemann was a great admirer of the French style, and that explains 
                  the title of the collection. And the French goût 
                  is present everywhere in this set. The collection is divided 
                  into three 'productions', each beginning with an ouverture and 
                  suite for orchestra and rounded off with a conclusion 
                  with the same scoring as the ouverture. In between are three 
                  pieces of chamber music: a solo (for one instrument and bc), 
                  a trio and a quartet. In addition each production contains a 
                  concerto for two or three instruments, strings and bc. Although 
                  the concerto was an Italian form, Telemann once wrote that even 
                  his concertos "mostly smell of France". Even so, Telemann 
                  was open to the Italian style as well, and it is an indication 
                  of his originality that he was able to mix the various styles. 
                  He does so in an often unexpected way. It has been argued - 
                  in particular by Karl Kaiser in his liner-notes to the recording 
                  of the Freiburger Barockorchester - that in the concertos and 
                  the trios the three productions have a specific character: the 
                  first French, the second Italian and the third reminiscent of 
                  Dresden as a representative of the German style. There is certainly 
                  something in that. But at the same time Telemann mixes the three 
                  styles in every production.  
                   
                  The orchestral overture may be typically French, modelled after 
                  Jean-Baptiste Lully, Telemann incorporated the Italian style 
                  in giving various instruments solo roles. In the first production 
                  these are two flutes, in the second oboe and trumpet and in 
                  the third two oboes. Quartets - or quatuors as they are 
                  called - were particular popular in France, and Telemann later 
                  would make use of that popularity in his Parisian Quartets. 
                  Whereas in these most movements had French titles, in the quartets 
                  in the Musique de Table all the movements are in Italian. 
                  Whereas the Parisian Quartets are scored for flute, violin, 
                  viola da gamba and bc, in the quartet of the third production 
                  Telemann uses the Italian cello rather than the French viola 
                  da gamba. The quartet texture returns in the concertos of the 
                  first two productions. One could consider them as a combination 
                  of the French quatuor and the Italian concerto. In the 
                  first concerto Telemann uses the same scoring as in the quartet 
                  of the last production. A curtsey to Dresden can be found in 
                  the role of the horns which often had a representative function 
                  and therefore reflect the splendour of the Dresden court. They 
                  play a solo role in the Concerto. One other element needs to 
                  be mentioned. Telemann's concertos are mostly in four movements. 
                  That is also the case in the concertos in the first and third 
                  production. But in the Concerto in F of the second production 
                  - scored for three violins, strings and bc - he follows the 
                  Vivaldian model of a sequence of three movements: allegro, largo, 
                  vivace. This is one of the most purely Italian pieces of the 
                  set. Another one is the Solo in A for violin and bc in 
                  the same production. This could also easily be connected to 
                  Dresden: here Germany's greatest violin virtuoso, Johann Georg 
                  Pisendel, was the leader of the famous court chapel. He was 
                  one of the subscribers to the Musique de Table - he ordered 
                  no less than six copies - and certainly will have enjoyed this 
                  virtuosic piece.  
                   
                  Telemann clearly considered the Musique de Table as one 
                  of his main projects. He signed the printing plates himself 
                  and closely watched over the printing process. The importance 
                  is well reflected in the number of recordings in modern times. 
                  If I remember correctly this is the second of Telemann's major 
                  collections of music to have been recorded. The first was his 
                  Der getreue Music-Meister of 1728. That was tackled by 
                  an ensemble of the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis under the direction 
                  of August Wenzinger. They also recorded the Musique de Table, 
                  again for Archiv. This was followed by a recording of Concerto 
                  Amsterdam, still playing on modern instruments, under the direction 
                  of Frans Brüggen. Later was recorded several times by ensembles 
                  on period instruments. Among them are the Concentus musicus 
                  Wien (Teldec), the Orchestra of the 18th Century (MDG:) 
                  and Musica Amphion (Brilliant 
                  Classics). In 1988 Musica antiqua Köln recorded the whole 
                  set for Archiv, and that was one of the best recordings of this 
                  ensemble whose founder and director, Reinhard Goebel, has always 
                  been a great Telemann advocate. It is also one of the best Telemann 
                  recordings of all time. It is a somewhat unhappy coincidence 
                  that this recording was reissued at about the same time a new 
                  recording was released by Harmonia Mundi, with the Freiburger 
                  Barockorchester. That is especially the case because both ensembles 
                  are German, and their approach is basically the same. There 
                  is even one player involved in both recordings: the trumpet 
                  Friedemann Immer. That said, there are some differences in the 
                  way this approach is realised.  
                   
                  Both performances are based on the conviction that in particular 
                  German music is based on rhetoric and need to be played like 
                  a speech to music. This is reflected in the phrasing and articulation 
                  as well as the use of dynamic accents. Musica antiqua Köln is 
                  more radical in its approach. The dynamic accents are heavier 
                  and the articulation sharper. There is also a difference in 
                  tempi. On the whole MAK take the fast movements more swiftly 
                  than FBO, whereas the slower movements are sometimes slower 
                  with MAK. The latter also treat the tempi with more flexibility 
                  in that sometimes the tempo momentarily slows. This way the 
                  tension is increased and some passages are spotlit. The performances 
                  by Musica Antiqua Köln are a shade more detailed, and that’s 
                  due not to the playing of the musicians but also to the recording. 
                  One has the impression of being in the middle of the ensemble 
                  - every line can be heard. The Harmonia mundi recording is less 
                  direct and the sound of the ensemble, in particular in the orchestral 
                  pieces, is less transparent.  
                   
                  In regard to the level of playing there is little difference 
                  between the ensembles. The Freiburger Barockorchester is one 
                  of the best in the performance of 18th-century music, and there 
                  are many virtuosos in its ranks. Although Musica Antiqua Köln 
                  was disbanded in 2007 most players involved in the recording 
                  of the Musique de Table still play a major role in the 
                  early music scene: flautist Jed Wentz, oboist Michael Niesemann 
                  and violinists Manfredo Kraemer, Florian Deuter and Werner Ehrhardt. 
                  It is only in some pieces that I found the Freiburger Barockorchester 
                  disappointing, in particular in the Concerto in A of 
                  the first production. It is a bit dull, and the playing of the 
                  solo parts not very engaging. On the whole I am more satisfied 
                  with the performances of Musica Antiqua Köln whose theatricality 
                  and feeling for colour express the qualities of Telemann's music 
                  best. It also plays all the repeats some of which are omitted 
                  in FBO's recording. The fact that the Archiv production is available 
                  at budget price could well be decisive in favour of the Archiv 
                  set. Telemann diehards will have to have them both.  
                   
                  Johan van Veen 
                  http://www.musica-dei-donum.org 
                  https://twitter.com/johanvanveen  
                 
             
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