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The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude – Bach – Fugue in G minor BWV 578
November 10, 2017 in Music | Tags: Bach - Fugue in G minor BWV 578, The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude | by The Arbourist | Comments closed
Pipe organ music that kicks your ears up, but in a good way. :)
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The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude – J.S. Bach Praeludium in c minor, BWV 546
November 3, 2017 in Music | Tags: BWV 546, J.S. Bach Praeludium in c minor, The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude | by The Arbourist | Comments closed
The sombre clarity of the pipe organ.
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The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude – Telemann – Harpsichord Concerto in B Minor TWV 33:A1
October 27, 2017 in Music | Tags: Harpsichord Concerto in B Minor TWV 33:A1, Telemann, The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude | by The Arbourist | Comments closed
One can only dabble with the current popular music for so long. Today, it is back to the Baroque with Telemann and a wonderful harpsichord concerto.
Telemann’s Concerto in B minor App. TWV 33:1. This work originally was scored for violin and orchestra (now lost) and today exists only in the composer’s own harpsichord arrangement. Unlike the Overtures, this concerto is a simpler, more straightforward piece,
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The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude – Tomaso Albinoni – Adagio in G minor
September 8, 2017 in Music | Tags: The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude, Tomaso Albinoni - Adagio in G minor | by The Arbourist | Comments closed
Life and Music
Born into a wealthy family of paper manufacturers who produced playing cards and owned several shops in Venice, Albinoni squandered his gifts as a young man.
Despite his exceptional talents as a singer, violinist and composer, during his teen years he indulged in the life of a talented ‘amateur’ among artistic friends. The success of his Op. 1 Trio Sonatas in 1694 quickly changed all that.
The Venetian public began to tire of the old operatic formulae, and at this point, Albinoni came close to giving up.
This resulted in a dramatic slowing down of the Albinoni production line during the 1730s and 1740s.
According to his death certificate, Albinoni had been bedridden for the last two years of his life.
Albinoni was pivotal in establishing the fast-slow-fast, three-movement concerto form, and his oboe concertos were among the very first of their kind ever published by an Italian composer.
His technique of opening his faster movements with an insistent motto, which is then used to bind the whole movement together, left its mark on the work of innumerable composers.
Yet by far the most prolific part of his output are his 53 known operas, however only three of these are still intact, most of the others having been lost except a handful of arias.
By the early 1720s, Albinoni had held the position of most popular composer for over a decade.
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The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude – Telemann: Concerto for three violins in F major (TWV 53:F1) Largo – Vivace
September 1, 2017 in Music | Tags: Telemann, The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude | by The Arbourist | Comments closed
Georg Philipp Telemann was born in Magdeburg, the son of a Lutheran deacon who died in 1685, leaving the mother to raise their three children alone. The youth showed remarkable talent in music, but was temporarily discouraged in his chosen pursuit by Puritan Lutherans, who told Telemann‘s mother that he would turn out no better than “a clown, a tightrope walker or a marmot-trainer.” In opposition to his mother’s wishes, Telemann continued to study in secrecy until she relented, allowing him to train under the highly respected Kantor Benedict Christiani, at the Old City School. Outside of some early lessons in reading tablature, Telemann was self-taught and was capable of playing the flute, violin, viola da gamba, oboe, trombone, double bass, and several keyboard instruments. Telemann began to write music from childhood, producing an opera, Sigismundus, by age 12.
Telemann was sent away to Zellerfeld in 1694; at the age of 20, the composer resolved to study law in Leipzig, but a chance meeting in Halle with 16-year-old Georg Friedrich Handel appears to have drawn him back to music. Telemann began writing cantatas for a church in Leipzig and quickly became a local celebrity. In 1702, he was named director of the Leipzig Opera, and over the next three years he wrote four operas specifically for this company.
Early on, Telemann‘s career is marked by sharp contrasts, both professionally and personally; Kapellmeister in Sorau, now part of Poland, in 1705, he only served three years before moving on to the court in Eisenach (1708-1712). In 1712 Telemann accepted an appointment in Frankfurt to the post of Kapellmeister at the Church of the Barefoot Friars and as director of municipal music. In 1709 Telemann married Amalie Eberlin, who died in childbirth during the first year of their union. In 1714 Telemann married Maria Katharina Textor, whose gambling addiction was so bad the citizens of Hamburg took up a collection in order save the couple from bankruptcy. Later Telemann’s second spouse would abandon him in favor of a Swedish military officer.
In 1721 Telemann‘s opera, Der geduldige Socrates was performed in Hamburg. That same year, Hamburg’s officials awarded Telemann the positions of Kantor of the Johanneum and musical director of the city’s principal churches. In doing so Telemann accepted the responsibility of writing two cantatas for every Sunday, a new Passion setting annually and of contributing music to a wide variety of liturgical and civic events. Telemann readily met these obligations and in 1722 accepted the directorship of the Hamburg Opera, serving until its closure in 1738.
Telemann was also one of the first composers to concentrate on the business of publishing his own music, and at least forty early prints of his music are known from editions which he prepared and sold himself. These published editions were in some cases extremely popular and spread Telemann‘s fame throughout Europe; in particular the Der Getreue Musik Meister (1728), Musique de Table or Tafelmusik (1733) and the 6 Concerts et 6 Suites (1734) were in wide use during Telemann‘s own lifetime.
Starting in the 1740s until about 1755, Telemann focused less on composition, turning his attentions to the study of music theory. He wrote many oratorios in the mid-1750s, including Donnerode (1756), Das befreite Israel (1759), and Die Auferstehung und Himmelfährt Jesu (1760). Telemann‘s long life ended at the age 86 in 1767.
Georg Philipp Telemann was considered the most important German composer of his day and his reputation outlasted him for some time, but ultimately it was unable to withstand the shadow cast by the growing popularity of his contemporary, Johann Sebastian Bach. Telemann enormous output, perhaps the largest of any classical composer in history, includes parts of at least 31 cantata cycles, many operas, concertos, oratorios, songs, music for civic occasions and church services, passion, orchestral suites and abundant amounts of chamber music. While many of these works have been lost, most still exist, and the sheer bulk of his creativity has made it difficult for scholars and performers alike to come to terms with. The inevitable revival of interest in Telemann did not arrive until the 1920s, but has grown exponentially ever since, and with the twenty first century in full swing more of Telemann‘s music is played, known, understood and studied than at any time in history.
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The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude – BVW 1034, Andante and Allegro
August 11, 2017 in Music | Tags: J.S. Bach - Andante and Allegro from sonata in e minor, The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude | by The Arbourist | 1 comment
Composed c. 1724, when Bach was around 39 years old.
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The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude – Bach, Menuet Trio in G minor, BWV 929, Piano
August 4, 2017 in Music | Tags: Bach, BWV 929, Menuet Trio in G minor, Piano, The DWR Friday Baroque Interlude | by The Arbourist | 2 comments
This piece also falls into the almost doable category. We’ll have to see. :)



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