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Gesellschaft Freunde der Künste

Rezension Gesellschaft Freunde der Künste 03.05.2013 | GFDK | May 3, 2013 Musik/Festival: Einzigartige Momente mit dem Trio Testore erleben - Live beim Kammermusikfestival Mai-Klassik & auf CD

Das Trio Testore hat in seiner Gesamtaufnahme der Brahms Klaviertrios beide Fassungen des Trios H-Dur op. 8 eingespielt: Die Urfassung und die 35 Jahre später überarbeitete Version, die in weiten Teilen einer Neukomposition gleich kommt.

Zur Zeit der Revision des ersten Trios schrieb Brahms zwei weitere, neue Trios gegensätzlicher Art. Die Musiker arbeiten durch überzeugende Tempowahl und plastische Gestaltung die großen Bögen, den „Atem" der Kompositionen heraus. Aus der Gesamtschau der Werke ergibt sich ein beispielhafter Eindruck von Brahms' kompositorischer Entwicklung.

Wir lieben klassische Musik

Das Trio Testore wurde im Jahr 2000 von Franziska Pietsch (Violine), Hans-Christian Schweiker (Violoncello) und Hyun-Jung Kim-Schweiker (Klavier) gegründet. Das Ensemble hat sich auf nationalen und internationalen Konzertpodien einen Namen gemacht. Zum 10-jährigen Jubiläum rief das Trio Testore 2011 das jährlich stattfindende Kammermusikfestival Mai-Klassik ins Leben.
Berliner Zeitung

Rezension Berliner Zeitung N r. 108 (11./12. Mai 2013) | Peter Uehling | May 11, 2013 Unfrommes Grillenzirpen mit Wind

Die Musik der kaum bekannten Komponisten ist überbordend, und das nicht nur klanglich. David Blunden und Johannes Strobl, der Hausorganist, haben Vokalkonzerte und instrumentale Canzonen auf zwei Orgeln verteilt, und die Spielfreude scheint durch diese Teilung die doppelte geworden zu sein.
Scherzo

Rezension Scherzo Año XXVIII - Nº 285 - Mayo 2013 | Juan García-Rico | May 1, 2013 Brahms: Obra de cámara con clarinet

La clarinetista Laura Ruiz protagoniza un interesante álbum con la integral...
www.musicweb-international.com

Rezension www.musicweb-international.com Wednesday 29th May 2013 | Dan Morgan | May 29, 2013 Audite have produced some of the finest organ recordings I know; among them is...

Audite have produced some of the finest organ recordings I know; among them is the first in their three-volume set of Franck played by Hans-Eberhard Roß, a disc of Christmas Preludes from Muri and Es ist ein Ros’ entprungen, a festive potpourri of organ/choral music from Bonn. Apart from the warmth, clarity and essential spaciousness of these recordings the choice of repertoire and instruments is also inspired. How refreshing to hear Franck played on the expressive yet ultra-refined Goll instrument of St Martin’s, Memmingen, rather than on a huge, less-than-subtle Cavaillé-Coll, and how bright-eyed and rosy-cheeked those wintry Preludes are made to sound.

The ancient Abbey Church of Muri has a long association with the Habsburg dynasty, so it’s appropriate that some of the music here is by Leopold I (1640-1705), otherwise known as Leopold Ignatius Joseph Balthasar Felician. Of the two organists Sydney-born David Blunden is new to me, but Johannes Strobl, Muri’s Director of Music, impressed me greatly with that collection of Christmas Preludes. In the choral items – O quam dulcis a 8, Victimae paschali laudes, Veni Sancte Spiritus and the Salve Regina – they are joined by the Choralschola der Cappella Murensis.

The two organs – the ‘Evangelienorgel’ played by Blunden, the ‘Epistelorgel’ played by Strobl – were built in 1743 by Joseph and Viktor Ferdinand Brossart. Both have been repaired and restored over the years, most recently in 1991-1992. Situated on either side of the High Altar they set the stage for some delightful interplay and ear-pricking antiphonal effects. That’s immediately evident in the opening piece by the Venetian composer – and Kapellmeister at the Habsburg court – Giovanni Priuli.

What a joyful noise these baroque organs make; clearly they aren’t large, but their forthright character – not to mention their lovely top-end sparkle – are superbly caught by the Audite engineers. The recording has plenty of body as well, with a discreet but telling bass, and there’s no muddying echo either. Most impressive is the enthusiasm and polish of these performers, whose ebullience and sure sense of style give the music such a lift. This tasty fare is nicely contrasted with the much leaner but wonderfully buoyant Conzon a 6 by Giovanni Valentin, who succeeded Priuli as court Kapellmeister in 1626. The latter’s piping little Canzone Seconda is a joy to hear; sonorities are always pleasing, the music is perfectly proportioned and all decorations are tastefully executed.

The programme is cleverly constructed too; Priuli’s stately O Quam Dulcis a 8 and the dark-hued Easter Sequence are a good foil to what’s gone before. There’s an extra weight and warmth to the latter – not to mention refined playing, singing and sonics – that cossets the ear and gladdens the heart. Indeed, it’s ages since I’ve heard such disciplined and dulcet tones from Baroque organs, and I suspect the sense of space and ‘air’ around the choir is even more tinglesome in multichannel.

After the deliciously florid and very danceable rhythms of Wolfgang Ebner’s Partite sopra l’Aria Favorita Froberger’s slow Toccata and the fluting Capriccio are taken by Strobl and Blunden respectively; needless to say both pieces are impeccably done. They rejoin the small but beautifully blended choir for what is probably the most moving and atmospheric work here, the Pentecostal Sequence Veni sancte Spiritus. Back in the days of vinyl this is what we called a demonstration-quality recording; happily, that’s also true of the CD layer, which suggests Audite have mastered this disc with great skill and sensitivity.

The pieces by Leopold I – now grave, now animated – are accomplished enough, but it’s Valentini pupil Johann Kaspar Kerll’s cuckoo imitation – a conceit favoured by composers of the period – that’s sure to raise a smile. Not only is it artfully written it’s also played with evident delight and a wonderful lightness of touch; and there’s more mimicry and wit to be heard in the bright, fugal cacophony of grasshoppers in Clamor grillorum campestrium. After that spot of levity Blunden plays the majestic Ricercar by the Austrian Franz Mathias Techelmann, while Strobl and the choir round off this cherishable programme with Techelmann’s simple yet deeply affecting Salve Regina; indeed, the splendid acoustics of this venerable building, its characterful organs and the you-are-there recording combine to produce some of the most ravishing sounds imaginable.

Audite have done it again; their consistently high production values – a surprisingly rare commodity in recorded music these days – extend to the glossy, informative and well-presented booklet and super jewel case; alas, it seems the latter may become a rarity, as the first of Audite’s new Vierne discs with Hans-Eberhard Roß – awaiting review – comes in a ghastly Digipak. That said, I have no reservations about this Muri disc which, like that Franck set in 2008, could well be one of my picks of the year.

Radiant music, superbly played, sung and recorded; a must for Baroque buffs, organ fanciers and audiophiles alike.
Early Music Review

Rezension Early Music Review No. 154 - June 2013 | Victoria Helby | June 1, 2013 Carl Stamitz (1745-1801) published two sets of clarinet quartets in Paris, the...

Carl Stamitz (1745-1801) published two sets of clarinet quartets in Paris, the first in 1773 and the second six years later. Although his musical upbringing was at the Mannheim court, where the clarinet was used in the orchestra from 1758 onwards, his travels in Europe led him to a style more reminiscent of Mozart in these attractive quartets. Indeed the first few notes of the first movement of op. 19 no. 2 are almost identical to Mozart's Andante for flute and orchestra K315 of 1778. This well-balanced recording is on modern instruments but Arthur Campbell's fluid playing has a lovely warm tone and the supporting strings are not over-vibrant. This is music which certainly deserves to be much better known.
Ensemble - Magazin für Kammermusik

Rezension Ensemble - Magazin für Kammermusik 3-2013 Juni/Juli | Carsten Dürer | June 1, 2013 Die 5-Sterne-Aufnahme

Die wichtigste Interpretin dieser kammermusikalischen Werke ist die spanische Klarinettistin Laura Ruiz Ferreres. Mit Bravour findet sie den richtigen Zugang zu der beschwingten Aussage von Brahms im Alter [...] die Intensität und die Klangschönheit, die Ferreres [...] zu produzieren in der Lage ist, berauscht den Zuhörer und nimmt ihn für die Musik voll ein.
Ensemble - Magazin für Kammermusik

Rezension Ensemble - Magazin für Kammermusik 3-2013 Juni/Juli | Isabel Fedrizzi | June 1, 2013 Ein Muss im CD-Regal

Doch schon ein erstes Lauschen eröffnet, dass das Trio Testore eine unbedingt hörenswerte Interpretation dieser vielgespielten Werke bietet: sehr emotional, ohne abgehoben zu sein, mit betont feinsinnigen dynamischen Abstufungen und – das Lob gilt insbesondere der Pianistin Hyun-Jung Kim-Schweiker – mit so vielen kleinen, feinen Differenzierungen, dass sich bei jedem Hören wieder neue Facetten erschließen.
Ensemble - Magazin für Kammermusik

Rezension Ensemble - Magazin für Kammermusik 3-2013 Juni/Juli | Carsten Dürer | June 1, 2013 Guter Beginn

Man hat das Gefühl, als wäre da nicht viel geschnitten worden, sondern als würde man einem Live-Konzert beiwohnen. Und genau diese Lebendigkeit macht diese Einspielung so besonders.
Ensemble - Magazin für Kammermusik

Rezension Ensemble - Magazin für Kammermusik 3-2013 Juni/Juli | Robert Nemecek | December 2, -1 Differenziert & homogen

Das Schweizer Klaviertrios, das Homogenität mit hoher Differenzierungskunst verbindet: [...] Der warme Ton, die atmende Phrasierung und das geschmeidige Zusammenspiel ergeben zusammen eine im besten Sinne "romantische" Interpretation
Ensemble - Magazin für Kammermusik

Rezension Ensemble - Magazin für Kammermusik 3-2013 Juni/Juli | Diether Steppuhn | June 1, 2013 Fast wie Mozart

In den 13 Sätzen dieser vier Klarinettenquartette funkelt, glänzt, trillert, singt und jubelt es in einem fort und findet doch immer wieder idyllische Ruhe in berührenden Andante-Mittelsätzen – Freudenmusik pur!

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