Lass dein Ohr auf Weisheit acht haben for Whitsunday, 1733, cantata: Choral: Wie sch?n leuchtet der Morgenstern
Machet di Tore weit for the First Sunday of Advent, 1727, cantata: Concerto
Machet di Tore weit for the First Sunday of Advent, 1727, cantata: Aria: Affettuoso
Machet di Tore weit for the First Sunday of Advent, 1727, cantata: Choral: vivace (m?lodie: Nun komm der Heiden Heiland)
Machet di Tore weit for the First Sunday of Advent, 1727, cantata: Aria
Machet di Tore weit for the First Sunday of Advent, 1727, cantata: R?citatif
Machet di Tore weit for the First Sunday of Advent, 1727, cantata: Choral
Overture for transverse flute, viola d'amore, chalumeau, strings & b.c. in F major, GWV 450: Ouverture - Allegro
Overture for transverse flute, viola d'amore, chalumeau, strings & b.c. in F major, GWV 450: La Speranza: Tempo giusto
Overture for transverse flute, viola d'amore, chalumeau, strings & b.c. in F major, GWV 450: Air(s) en Gavotte (I, II, III)
Overture for transverse flute, viola d'amore, chalumeau, strings & b.c. in F major, GWV 450: Menuet(s) (I, II)
Overture for transverse flute, viola d'amore, chalumeau, strings & b.c. in F major, GWV 450: Air(s) (I, II)
Overture for transverse flute, viola d'amore, chalumeau, strings & b.c. in F major, GWV 450: Plaisanterie(s) (I, II, III)
Gedenket an den for the First Sunday after Christmas, 1727, cantata: Dictum
Gedenket an den for the First Sunday after Christmas, 1727, cantata: R?citatif
Gedenket an den for the First Sunday after Christmas, 1727, cantata: Aria
Gedenket an den for the First Sunday after Christmas, 1727, cantata: R?citatif
Gedenket an den for the First Sunday after Christmas, 1727, cantata: Choral
Gedenket an den for the First Sunday after Christmas, 1727, cantata: Aria
Gedenket an den for the First Sunday after Christmas, 1727, cantata: R?citatif
Gedenket an den for the First Sunday after Christmas, 1727, cantata: Choral
Nun freut euch lieben Christen gmein for the Third Day of Christmas, 1750, cantata for solo bass: Choral
Nun freut euch lieben Christen gmein for the Third Day of Christmas, 1750, cantata for solo bass: R?citatif
Nun freut euch lieben Christen gmein for the Third Day of Christmas, 1750, cantata for solo bass: Aria: Vivace
Nun freut euch lieben Christen gmein for the Third Day of Christmas, 1750, cantata for solo bass: Dictum
Nun freut euch lieben Christen gmein for the Third Day of Christmas, 1750, cantata for solo bass: R?citatif
Nun freut euch lieben Christen gmein for the Third Day of Christmas, 1750, cantata for solo bass: Aria: Allegro
Geneviève Soly, Artistic Director of L'ensemble des Idèes heureuses, is one of the world's few true experts on the music of Christoph Graupner. She is responsible for bringing to light a vast and valuable catalog... more » of Graupner's music. Christmas in Darmstadt features the first recording of several works Graupner composed for the holiday season. Thanks to Soly's great passion for the music of Graupner, these wonderful works can finally be heard.« less
Geneviève Soly, Artistic Director of L'ensemble des Idèes heureuses, is one of the world's few true experts on the music of Christoph Graupner. She is responsible for bringing to light a vast and valuable catalog of Graupner's music. Christmas in Darmstadt features the first recording of several works Graupner composed for the holiday season. Thanks to Soly's great passion for the music of Graupner, these wonderful works can finally be heard.
CD Reviews
Classy Baroque Christmas Music
J Scott Morrison | Middlebury VT, USA | 12/12/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Christoph Graupner (1683-1760) was a near-contemporary of Bach who toiled in near-obscurity for almost all his productive life in the south German city of Darmstadt, where he was kapellmeister of the court church from 1709 until he became blind in 1753. Little of his music was published in his lifetime and when some of it was published in the 20th century it was mostly ignored. Enter Montréal harpsichordist, organist and musicologist Geneviève Soly who, after discovering some Graupner harpsichord partitas in the Yale library, has made it her life-work to discover as much as possible about the composer and to publish and record as much as she can. This is the sixth CD (three instrumental, three vocal) in an ongoing series of recordings of Graupner's music featuring Mlle Soly and the instrumental and vocal group she founded for this purpose, Les Idées heureuses.
This volume contains three cantatas for the Christmas season, as well as a flute (or recorder) suite (called an Overture). It starts with a chorale excerpted from yet another cantata based on the well-known chorale of Luther, 'Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern' ('How brightly shines the morning star') in an unusual (and lovely) harmonic treatment by Graupner. The three cantatas are 'Machet die Tore weit' ('Throw open the door') and 'Gedenket an den' ('Think on him') from 1727, and the much-later (1850) 'Nun freut euch, lieben Christen gmein' ('Rejoice now, dear Christians all').
Graupner wrote over 1400 cantatas in his long professional life and reportedly never performed any of them more than once. Imagine the amount of work entailed in composing a new cantata for each Sunday! The general form of his cantatas was roughly this: A first piece whose text was related to the day's Gospel reading, usually written as a recitative for tenor, followed by a first-person da capo aria sung by one of the church's soloists. Then a chorale which acts as an exegesis of the scripture, the text in third person. Then another first-person aria, another tenor recitative, and a closing choral. This is the so-called 'mixed madrigalian cantata.' Although the third of the cantatas presented here was written 23 years after the first two, its form has not been significantly changed. Graupner's style is a bit less contrapuntal than Bach's and tends more towards what would become the style galant or rococo style. He has an excellent ability to write memorable and apt melodies and his harmonic sense is slightly less chromatic than Bach's, but there are still occasionally surprises, as in the harmonizations of the chorales.
The soloists here are quite adequate if not entirely world class. Frankly, this may work to the advantage of the music because it makes the works sound more like church, not concert, performances. The four solo singers act as the chorus in the chorales. The wholly delightful flute concerto is played with verve and fluency by recorder player Natalie Michaud. There is a good deal of expert violin obbligato playing in the concerto done nicely by an unnamed player. Instrumental support in the cantatas is inobtrusive, alert and entirely solid.
These are important recordings if only because Graupner is just now coming, deservedly, to our attention and benefits from these kinds of informed and masterful performances. This CD (along with its companions) is recommended for those who wish to explore up-to-now obscure byways of the baroque.