Telemann: Das Seliges Erwägen
Freiburger Barockorchester & Choräle Chorals, Gottfried von der Goltz
Well recorded and stylishly performed. Anna Lucia Richter has some of the most beguiling arias and she delivers them with lightly articulated expression and delicacy of phrasing…I hasten to...
Telemann: Das Seliges Erwägen
Freiburger Barockorchester & Choräle Chorals, Gottfried von der Goltz
Purchase product
Well recorded and stylishly performed. Anna Lucia Richter has some of the most beguiling arias and she delivers them with lightly articulated expression and delicacy of phrasing…I hasten to...
About
The Freiburger Barockorchester, directed from Gottfried von der Goltz’s violin, released a brand new recording of Telemann’s rare Passion, entitled Seliges Erwägen (Contemplative Meditations). More than just setting to music the story of the passion of Christ, such as Bach did, we hear in this score a succession of meditations. If we know little about its genesis, it is acknowledged that the success of this work was considerable, even more than that of his Passion after Brockes or his oratorio The Death of Jesus. The clear diction and the transparency of the voices in the chorals perfectly convey the dramatic expression, typical of these sacred works. Telemann entrusts the orchestra to emphasize the affects of the text thanks to a subtle instrumentation. The sound of the chalumeaux, clarinet’s ancestors, enriches the wood section and contributes to the diversity of characters that reflects the composer’s imagination. The superb baroque ensemble on period instruments from Freiburg enhances Telemann's consoling and luminous humanity.
Contents and tracklist
- Peter Harvey (soloist), Colin Balzer (soloist), Michael Feyfar (soloist), Henk Neven (soloist), Hanna Zumsande (soloist), Anna Lucia Richter (soloist), Julienne Mbodjé (soloist)
- Freiburger Barockorchester
- Gottfried von der Goltz
Awards and reviews
August 2018
Well recorded and stylishly performed. Anna Lucia Richter has some of the most beguiling arias and she delivers them with lightly articulated expression and delicacy of phrasing…I hasten to add, though, that the other major solo contributions are of a comparable order and the playing of the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra all that one could wish for.