Firstly, I have to compliment the design and packaging of this 
                  excellent 2 CD set. It’s a book-style hard cover production, 
                  profusely illustrated with beautifully reproduced images of 
                  Frederick the Great, and his times, and with a useful historical 
                  time-line included and an excellent musico-cultural essay on 
                  the court. Pahud also gets to dress up; the cover photograph 
                  is restrained, but the one inside is gloriously, if deadpan, 
                  camp.
                   
                  These discs represent a journey to the flute-playing King’s 
                  court for an exploration of his musical life and times — which 
                  include those of contemporary composers, as well as his composing 
                  sisters.
                   
                  The two discs are split between concertos and sonatas. The first 
                  disc starts with CPE Bach’s Concerto in A of which parallel 
                  versions exist for harpsichord and cello. It’s certainly stamped 
                  with Vivaldi’s influence but what lifts it above the merely 
                  competent is the exceptional, indeed extraordinarily forlorn 
                  slow movement, music of such openness and candour as to astonish. 
                  Well, it astonished me. The expressive intimacy doesn’t extend, 
                  and nor should it, to the genial finale, which is crisp, rhythmically 
                  alive and graced by Pahud’s effortless pirouettes and curlicues. 
                  The Bohemian Franz Benda contributes a Concerto in E minor. 
                  He joined the King’s retinue in 1733. He mainly wrote for the 
                  violin, his own instrument, but composed four fluent and attractive 
                  flute concertos. The first movement cadenza is dispatched with 
                  regal insouciance, and there’s a warm slow movement. Benda was 
                  an important early figure at court but the biggest influence 
                  came from Johann Joachim Quantz, who was Frederick’s musical 
                  mentor, hired at an astronomically high salary. His quietly 
                  confident Concerto in G is very much of its time, full of (once 
                  again) Vivaldian influence and also a refined lyricism. The 
                  sole example of Frederick’s Concerto writing in this disc — 
                  he wrote four altogether — comes in the shape of his Third Concerto. 
                  It reflects the surety of Quantz’s teaching, but Frederick also 
                  evinces some personalised touches such as strong rhythmic framing 
                  devices, and winning colours and effects in the slow movement. 
                  It’s a very competent and engaging work,
                   
                  The second disc opens with JS Bach’s Musical Offering 
                  BWV1079 which he wrote for Frederick in 1747 infusing the music 
                  with something of the old Galant style. One of the 
                  King’s musical sisters, Anna Amalia, is represented by her practical, 
                  well laid out and effective Sonata in F. The King’s own Sonata 
                  in B minor has disarming warmth, makes articulation demands 
                  above the ordinary in the Allegretto second movement, 
                  and is a fine index of his compositional competence. In these 
                  sonata works Pahud is joined by Trevor Pinnock with whom he 
                  has worked before. They explore Johann Agricola’s Sonata in 
                  A — Agricola was a pupil of JS Bach — which is a solid piece 
                  of Baroquerie in the best sense, and C.P.E. Bach’s so-called 
                  Hamburger Sonata in G, a tasty morsel which, whilst stylistically 
                  a bit retrogressive, makes up for it via catchy tunes, technical 
                  challenges and a really delightful sense of animation. Pahud 
                  takes on the same composer’s Sonata in A minor for solo flute. 
                  This had a precedent in JS’s own solo flute work of 1718, but 
                  C.P.E. is his own man, and the angularity of the music and the 
                  clever intervallic writing are a constant source of interest.
                   
                  If I began by praising the housing of the discs, let me end 
                  by lauding the performances. Pahud is an exceptional artist, 
                  as he demonstrates here, once more. He is a dextrous flautist, 
                  richly toned but never flashy. He also doesn’t mind dressing 
                  up in the interests of photographic art. Kammerakademie Potsdam 
                  gives excellent support in the concertos, as does Pinnock and 
                  cellist Jonathan Manson in the sonatas. Matthew Truscott’s outing 
                  in the Musical Offering is finely tuned. The engineering 
                  is also excellent.
                   
                  I have nothing but praise for selection, performances and concept.
                   
                  Jonathan Woolf
                Track list
                CD1
                  Carl Philipp Emanuel BACH 
                  (1714-1788)
                  Concerto in A, Wq168/H483 [19:07]
                  Franz BENDA (1709-1786)
                  Concerto in E minor [17:58]
                  FREDERICK II of Prussia 
                  (1712-1786)
                  Concerto No.3 [14:26]
                  Johann Joachim QUANTZ (1697-1773)
                  Concerto in G, QV5:174 [15:54]
                  
                  CD2
                  Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750)
                  Musical Offering BWV1079 – Trio Sonata [18:35]
                  ANNA AMALIA of Prussia (1723-1787)
                  Sonata in F for flute and basso continuo [10:28]
                  Carl Philipp Emanuel BACH
                  Sonata in A minor for flute solo, Wq132/H562 [14:51]
                  Hamburger Sonata in G for flute and basso continuo, Wq133/H564 
                  [9:16]
                  Johann Friedrich AGRICOLA 
                  (1720-1774)
                  Sonata in A for flute and basso continuo [10:07]
                  FREDERICK II of Prussia
                  Sonata in B minor for flute and basso continuo [14:21]