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2CD 480 3628 early music up late AS HEARD ON ABC CLASSIC FM WITH SIMON HEALY CD1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 2 [74’11] GEORGE FRIDERIC HANDEL 1685-1759 Concerto grosso in G major, Op. 6 No. 1, HWV319 I. A tempo giusto II. Allegro III. Adagio IV. Allegro V. Allegro Lucinda Moon, Ben Dollman violins, Jamie Hey cello, Tommie Andersson theorbo, Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, Paul Dyer director and harpsichord MARC-ANTOINE CHARPENTIER 1643-1704 Messe de minuit pour Noël (Midnight Mass f or Christmas), H9: Credo Annick Massis soprano, Magdalena Kožená mezzo-soprano, Eric Huchet, Patrick Henckens tenors, Russell Smythe baritone, Jean-Louis Bindi bass, Chœur des Musicians du L ouvre, Les Musiciens du Louvre, Marc Minkowski director [11’19] 1’41 1’42 2’34 2’41 2’41 9’07 WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART 1756-1791 Piano Concerto No. 11 in F major, KV413: II. Larghetto Robert Levin fortepiano, The Academy of Ancient Music, Christopher Hogwood director 6’55 JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH 1685-1750 Cantata BWV8 ‘Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben?’ (Dear God, when will I die?): Opening chorus Julianne Baird soprano, Allan Fast countertenor, Frank Kelley tenor, Jan Opalach bass, The Bach Ensemble, Joshua Rifkin director 5’45 JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH Violin Partita No. 2 in D minor, BWV1004: IV. Giga Richard Tognetti violin 4’05 3 0 ! @ £ $ % ^ & * JOSQUIN DESPREZ c.1440-1521 Praeter rerum serium (Outside the natural order of things) Gabrieli Consort, Paul McCreesh director 6’58 GEORG PHILIPP TELEMANN 1681-1767 Trio Sonata in A minor for recorder, oboe and basso continuo [9’37] I. Largo 2’22 II. Allegro 1’28 III. Cantabile 2’36 IV. Allegro 3’11 Philidor Ensemble (Ricardo Kanji recorder, Ku Ebbinge Baroque oboe, Chris Farr harpsichord ) HEINRICH BACH 1615-1692 Ich danke dir, Gott (I thank thee, O God) 5’52 Maria Zedelius soprano, Ulla Groenewold alto, David Cordier countertenor, Paul Elliott tenor, Michael Schopper bass, Rheinische Kantorei, Musica Antiqua Köln, Reinhard Goebel director JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH Keyboard Partita No. 3 in A minor, BWV827: II. Allemande Nicholas Parle harpsichord CARLO GESUALDO c.1561-1613 O dolorosa gioia (O sorrowful joy) The Consort of Musicke (Evelyn Tubb soprano, Mary Nichols alto, Joseph Cornwell, Andrew King tenors, Richard Wistreich bass) JEAN-PHILIPPE RAMEAU 1683-1764 Castor et Pollux – Instrumental Suite: Chaconne Orchestra of the 18th Century, Frans Brüggen director 4 3’48 3’18 6’10 CD2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 [74’48] ANTONIO VIVALDI 1678-1741 Violin Concerto in G minor, RV325 I. Allegro molto II. Largo a piacimento III. Presto Giuliano Carmignola violin, Venice Baroque Orchestra, Andrea Marcon director [7’36] 3’31 1’56 2’09 JOHANNES BRAHMS 1833-1897 Drei Gesänge (Three songs), Op. 42 I. Abendständchen (Evening serenade) II. Vineta III. Darthulas Grabesgesang (Dar-Thula’s funeral song) Monteverdi Choir, John Eliot Gardiner director [8’41] 2’04 2’15 4’22 JOSEPH HAYDN 1732-1809 Symphony No. 88 in G major : II. Largo Orchestra of the 18th Century, Frans Brüggen director 5’29 GIACHES DE WERT 1535-1596 Grazie ch’a pochi (Charms that too few) The Song Company (Ruth McCall, Nicole Thomson sopranos, Jo Burton mezzo-soprano, David Hamilton tenor, David McKenzie tenor, Clive Birch bass-baritone), Roland Peelman director CHRISTIAN RITTER c.1645-after 1717 Suite in F-sharp minor: III. Sarabande Gustav Leonhardt clavichord 5’05 2’30 5 0 ! @ £ $ % ^ & * ANTONIO VIVALDI Vestro Principi divino (Lift up your heads), RV633 I. Vestro Principi divino (Lift up your heads) II. Recitative: O felix culpa (O happy fault) III. Quid loqueris ad cor (What will y ou say to my heart?) IV. Alleluia Andreas Scholl countertenor, Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, Paul Dyer director CARL PHILIPP EMANUEL BACH 1714-1788 Trio Sonata in C major, Wq149 / H573: II. Andante Ensemble of the Classic Era (Kate Clark flute, Paul Wright violin, Geoffrey Lancaster fortepiano, Susan Blake cello) JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH Cantata BWV124 ‘Meinen Jesum lass ich nicht’ (I shall not abandon m y Jesus): V. Entziehe dich eilends, mein Her ze, der Welt (O my heart, make haste to withdraw from the world) Sara Macliver soprano, Sally-Anne Russell mezzo-soprano, Orchestra of the Antipodes (Daniel Yeadon cello, Neal Peres Da Costa chamber organ), Antony Walker conductor GEORGE FRIDERIC HANDEL Sonata a 5 in B-flat major, HWV288 I. Andante II. Adagio III. Allegro Simon Standage violin, The English Concert, Trevor Pinnock director 6 [8’08] 4’02 0’37 2’12 1’17 ( ) 5’31 ¡ ™ # ¢ 3’59 JOHN WELDON 1676-1736 Halcyon Days Catherine Bott soprano, Anthony Robson oboe, Pavlo Beznosiuk violin, Paula Chateauneuf guitar, Richard Egarr harpsichord, Mark Levy bass viol ROBERT PARSONS c.1530-1570 Ave Maria Cantillation, Antony Walker conductor 3’52 4’47 JOHANN DAVID HEINICHEN 1683-1729 Concerto in F major, S234 I. Vivace II. Adagio III. Un poco allegro IV. Allegro Musica Antiqua Köln, Reinhard Goebel director [9’22] 4’20 1’26 3’36 7 [8’34] 2’29 0’44 2’24 2’57 early music up late Every Monday to Thursday night it’s my pleasure to present a personal choice of music Up Late on ABC Classic FM. I could pretend that I use all sorts of elaborate criteria f or deciding what to play. It’s certainly true that I attempt to balance a mix of st yles from the Renaissance to more recent times. I also try to vary the texture with a selection of v ocal and instrumental works, chamber music and Early Music. In practice, I simply ask m yself of each recording, ‘What does it sound like?’, ‘Have we had too much of this already?’ and ‘W ould I enjoy it if I were at home late at night?’ When Martin Buzacott of ABC Classics suggested to me that I might lik e to choose a sequence of Early Music recordings of the sort that I regularly play on Up Late, I was delighted to accept. We live in an extraordinarily privileged age in which the treasures of the past can be readily sampled at an y time and place that suits us. Yet the death of the classical recording industr y is regularly announced in the mainstream media. If anything, one could argue that the major labels are victims of their o wn efforts and must compete against the v ast back-catalogue that they created, available now at lower and lower cost to the music lover. Rather than seeing this as a f ailure, I regard it as an enormous ac hievement realised through collaboration with generations of great musicians. Once the e xclusive province of kings, princes and the wealthy, classical music is now available to a larger, and better informed, audience than at any time in its history. In the case of Early Music, recordings allow us to go into the t ypes of spaces and acoustics for which it was composed, using instruments of the period, or faithful copies. I find late nights to be the perfect time to enjoy such music and it’s thanks to recordings that w e can. I hope this collection brings you as much pleasure as I had in c hoosing it. than 30,000 people. Hundreds of thousands hear its broadcasts on ABC Classic FM. In addition, the orchestra tours nationally and has a regular commitment to performing in regional Australia. The orchestra’s 14 discs for ABC Classics include four ARIA Award winners for Best Classical Recording. Handel’s Concerto grosso in G major, Op. 6 No. 1, from the most recent of these, is giv en a tight, dramatic reading complete with st ylish improvised cadenzas by the orchestra’s concertmaster of many years, Lucinda Moon. The 17th-century French composer Marc-Antoine Charpentier has achieved an entirely modern t ype of fame, unimaginable in his lifetime. Without realising it, millions would recognise his music thanks to the use of the Prelude to his Te Deum as Eurovision’s signature tune for many years. Little of Charpentier’s music was published during his lifetime and his current popularity is an example of the way in which the Early Music revival has, in effect, created a t ype of contemporary music tradition almost from scratch for some composers. Despite its sacred purpose, Charpentier ’s liturgical music is often highly theatrical. From 1687 he was maître de musique of the Jesuit Church of St Louis, known to contemporaries as l’église de l’Opéra through its regular employment of singers usually seen on the stage. A particularly delightful feature of Charpentier’s Midnight Mass for Christmas is the use of noëls (carols) which enhance the delicate, pastoral quality of the music. Bassoonist and conductor Marc Minkowski founded Les Musiciens du Louvre in 1982 and the group has been based in Grenoble since 1 996. They were chosen to perform at the recent gala reopening of the magnificent Opéra Royal at Versailles after two years of restoration work. Originally dedicated to the performance of French Baroque music, the group has e volved into a flexible ensemble that performs an enormous range of music – e ven Bizet’s Carmen – using instruments appropriate to each period. It seems entirely fitting that the first item should be from a recent ABC Classics release by the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, founded in 1989 by harpsichordist Paul Dyer. Having trained and worked with such eminent European figures as Bob van Asperen, Sigiswald Kuijken and Frans Brüggen, and building on the w ork of this countr y’s pioneers in the historical perf ormance field, Paul’s extraordinary energy and vision has made the orc hestra a central feature of the musical landscape. Since 2003 it has been a member of the Australian Major Performing Arts Group, making it one of 28 flagship national arts organisations supported b y the Australia Council for the Arts. Through its annual subscription series, the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra performs for live audiences totalling more The modern concert grand piano is an icon of classical music thanks to its e xpressive capabilities and the fact that its sound can easily fill large halls. For many years it was assumed that composers such as Bach and Mozart would have jumped at the chance to use it in preference to the instruments available to them. This so-called ‘modern plumbing’ argument ignores the f act that few composers actually expressed dissatisfaction with the instruments of their day. Mozart befriended t wo of the greatest contemporary fortepiano makers – Johann Andreas Stein (1728-1792) and Anton Walter (17521826). He owned one of the latter’s instruments and wrote to his f ather of Stein’s that ‘whatever way I strike the keys, the tone always remains even, never either jarring or failing to sound… The pains and skill which Stein bestows on these pianos cannot be sufficiently repaid.’ 8 9 The American pianist Robert Levin is famous for improvising cadenzas in performances of Mozart concertos, just as Mozart did himself. On this recording of the lo vely slow movement of the Piano Concerto No. 11 in F major, KV413 he plays a modern copy of a Stein fortepiano from around 1785, made in Amsterdam two hundred years later by Paul McNulty. This beautiful instrument combines a crisp and clear bass with a pearl-lik e treble register that can create a singing line equal to that of an y modern piano. distinguished series of Bach recordings for ABC Classics, using an instrument made by Giovanni Battista Guadagnini in Parma in 1759. The lively Gigue that I’ve chosen shows that Bach was never far away from the dance in his music, in mark ed contrast to the humourless image that has ser ved him so badly. The American scholar-musician Joshua Rifkin first achieved public recognition with his Nonesuch recordings of Scott Joplin’s piano music. These did a great deal to spark the ragtime revival of the early 1970s and actually preceded the use of J oplin’s music in the movie The Sting. In the early 1980s he caused outrage by proposing the revolutionary theory that Bach’s choir was, in fact, nothing of the sort. Presenting an impressive array of evidence, he argued that it consisted, instead, of a group of soloists. Rifkin then made a persuasiv e one-to-a-part recording of Bach’s B minor Mass. We were fortunate to hear him convincingly repeat this with a perf ormance broadcast by ABC Classic FM from the Perth Festival a few years ago. Like so many French and Flemish composers of the R enaissance, Josquin Desprez spent much of his career in Italy, working for the court of Milan and at the Sistine Chapel in R ome. In 1502 the ducal court of Ferrara poached him as its maestro di cappella and was willing to pay an extravagant salary for the privilege. Josquin’s celebrated six-voice motet Praeter rerum seriem uses masterly interplay of parts based on a simple plainchant melody with a text that refers to the Nativit y as ‘outside the natural order of things’. Often compared to a magnificent architectural structure, music such as this illustrates perfectly the inadequacy of words to describe what the imagination of a great composer can ac hieve emotionally and intellectually in such a small space of time. F or me, the distinctive sound of Paul McCreesh’s Gabrieli Consort is rather more ‘continent al’ than the usual English choral style, with a robust and colourful flavour that suits such full-blooded polyphonic writing . Over the years, Rifkin’s theory has won many supporters. He’s also made a startling series of Bach cantata recordings. The opening chorus of ‘Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben’, BWV8 is one of the most beautiful of all B ach’s compositions – a rich and moving fantasia. As with so many of the texts of his cant atas, death is the subject, holding out the promise of greater happiness in the af terlife. In the shimmering instrumental writing, it’s hard not to imagine that we hear the tolling of funeral bells and the sound of a ticking clock, representing our fleeting lives as they advance toward the inevitable. We are indeed fortunate to have recordings of Bach’s music that enable us to live vastly more pleasurable lives on earth than those of his contemporaries. Formerly dismissive attitudes to Bach’s extremely prolific contemporary Georg Philipp Telemann have improved in recent years as the breadth and quality of his music have become more apparent, thanks to modern scholarship. Telemann was a composer for all seasons and one of the first to see himself as a creative entrepreneur catering for a paying market. Aware of the growing middle-class desire for printed works suitable for domestic music-making, he published a series of w ell-crafted chamber music to suit players at all levels, from those of modest technical ability up to the highest professionalism. The Trio Sonata in A minor shows what satisfying and enjoyable music he could create with relatively modest means. The old image of Bach as first and foremost a composer of religious music has gradually c hanged thanks to a reassessment of his pre-L eipzig career at the court of the music-loving Prince Leopold of Anhalt-Cöthen. One can only wonder what wealth of instrumental music Bach might have produced had he been successful in gaining the emplo yment he sought at a great musical centre suc h as Dresden. The few hours of chamber music by Bach that survive are certainly amongst the greatest ever composed and central to these are the Sonatas and Partitas for Unaccompanied Violin. As other-worldly as the music of B ach seems to us, he maint ained that it was simply the product of a skill that could be acquired with practice and diligence. F or generations, music had been the B ach family business, and his pride in the ac hievements of his predecessors is sho wn by the fact that he carefully preserved an archive of their music. On his death in 1 750, this passed to his son Carl Philipp Emanuel and eventually to Carl Friedrich Zelter, director of the Berlin Singakademie and teacher of Mendelssohn, whose performance of the St Matthew Passion in 1829 sparked the Bach revival. Bach’s great-uncle Heinrich was born 70 years before him, in 1615. His short cant ata Ich danke dir, Gott (I thank thee, O God) shows that the family’s pride in its herit age was more than justified. Musica Antiqua Köln, under its director Reinhard Goebel, joined forces with Hermann Max’s Rheinische One of Australia’s finest violinists, Richard Tognetti is the Artistic Director and leader of the Australian Chamber Orchestra, undoubtedly one of the w orld’s great medium-sized ensembles. He’s made a 10 11 Kantorei to lovingly record music from the Bach family archive in the mid-1980s. I’m very pleased to be able to include one of the re velatory performances from this landmark in the histor y of recording. J.S. Bach was recognised by his contemporaries as one of the great k eyboard virtuosi of his day. The pride that he took in his k eyboard music can be seen from the f act that the six Keyboard Partitas were amongst the few items that he published during his lifetime. They are clearly designed for the type of double-manual harpsichord of which Bach possessed a number. The Sydney-born harpsichordist Nicholas Parle won the rarely-awarded First Prize in the International Harpsichord Competition in Brugge in 1989. Since 2004 he has t aught at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater in Leipzig, the city in which Bach worked for the last 27 years of his life. Admired by Stravinsky, Carlo Gesualdo, Prince of Venosa, was for many years more famous for his deeds than his music, having allegedly murdered his first wif e and her lover. Through its performances of his passionate and occasionally intemperate v ocal works, the Consort of Musicke has made us more aware of the full range of Gesualdo ’s personality and talent. His Fifth Book of Madrigals, published in 1611, brings twisted chromatic harmonies to a t ypically tortured text. O dolorosa gioia is full of exquisite contradictions, with its references to ‘sorrowful joy’, ‘sweet pain’ and ‘welcome torments’, as if the miser y of unrequited love is something to be savoured. Had Jean-Phillippe Rameau died before his 50th birthday, he would still be famous as one of the greatest composers of harpsichord music and a revolutionary music theorist. Late in his career, he embarked on the series of operas on whic h his reputation now rests. Perhaps the greatest orchestrator before Berlioz, Rameau fills his music with delights and surprises. The suites of symphonies extracted from these operas are great orchestral showpieces. Since its creation in the early 1980s, Frans Brüggen’s Orchestra of the 18th Century has produced exciting performances of Rameau’s music, notable particularly for rhythmic precision and a translucent string sound. The first disc ends with a Chaco nne from Rameau’s biggest success, Castor and Pollux, first performed in 1737. Over a repeated bass, the composer spins a w eb of great melodic invention and gorgeous textures. A 12 Few composers symbolise the cur rent popularity of Baroque orchestral music better than the Red Priest of Venice, Antonio Vivaldi. His hundreds of concertos fill the recording cat alogues, and audiences show little sign of becoming bored with them. Sixt y years ago, only a handful of scholars would have known much about Vivaldi’s music, but since The Four Seasons became a hit for I Musici in 1955, millions have become fans. Founded in 1997 by Baroque scholar and harpsichordist Andrea Marcon, the Venice Baroque Orchestra gives lively and stylish performances of his music, including the Violin Concerto in G minor, RV325. With their impeccably t ailored suits, they are also one of the best-dressed ensembles around. Music of Brahms would appear not to belong in a collection of Early Music but this composer has an honoured place in the histor y of the revival. A musician of insatiable curiosit y, the largely self-taught Brahms strove to learn as much as he could from the music of the past, amassing a large collection of original manuscripts. He corresponded with many of the important 19th-century musical scholars and subscribed to all of the significant historical editions, studying the music in great det ail as each new volume arrived. In addition to this prof ound knowledge of old music, he w as also capable of appreciating the freshness and originalit y of Bizet’s Carmen, the unique genius of Dv ořák and the unpretentious entertainments of his friend Johann Strauss II. Some of the earliest fr uits of his study of Early Music can be heard in the Three Songs, Op. 42 composed in 1860. Using rich six-part writing, the young composer explores a more polyphonic vocal texture than his contemporaries, subdividing altos and basses, and heralding the fluid st yle of his later music. The use of antiphonal call-andresponse between the male and female voices suggests an awareness of the music of Gabrieli, Monteverdi and the German composers that the y influenced, such as Heinrich Schütz. Brahms thought the slow movement of Haydn’s Symphony No. 88 in G major one of the greatest pieces of music ever written. Composed in the wake of the success of the six Paris Symphonies¸ this is Haydn at his most witty and urbane. Against a delicate accompaniment, sometimes including pizzicato strings, the beautiful theme played by the oboe disproves the claim, still heard from time to time, that Haydn didn’t have Mozart’s melodic gift. This is also the first of Ha ydn’s symphonies to use trumpets and timpani in a slo w movement and their sudden, completely une xpected arrival shocked audiences at the time. Once the w orld’s most famous recorder player, as a conductor Frans Brüggen has revealed hidden subtleties in what can so easily appear to be simple and straightf orward music. As an advocate for Haydn, he has few rivals. 13 The 16th-century Flemish composer Giaches de Wert found himself in Italy at an even earlier age than his contemporaries, when he was employed as a boy singer in the household of Maria di Cardona, Marchesa of Padulla. One of the greatest madrigalists before Monteverdi, he later worked for the powerful Gonzaga family in Mantua, while also being closely connected to the rival Este court in Ferrara. Grazie ch’a pochi sets a text by the great Italian poet Petrarch which catalogues in detail the lover’s many virtues. Based in Sydney, The Song Company is a widely admired, full-time professional vocal ensemble which has made a significant contribution to the performance of music from many eras. Their ABC Classics CD devoted to the Flemish in Italy during the Renaissance is a great favourite of mine. Fortepiano Competition in Brugge in 1986. His ability to balance the quixotic against the tasteful and refined in music of this period mak es him one of its most persuasiv e interpreters. The clavichord is an instrument that you’re very unlikely to hear in a concert hall due to its whisper -like softness, though recording-studio microphones can turn it from David into Goliath. The simplest of keyboard instruments, it produces its tone b y striking a metal tangent against the string. An extremely expressive instrument within a narrow dynamic range, the clavichord found a special place in man y musical homes. The great Dutch harpsichordist Gustav Leonhardt was one of the first pla yers to use faithful copies of period instruments rather than the unresonant, modern ‘h ybrid’ harpsichords favoured until the early 1960s. He’s also been an eloquent adv ocate on disc for the clavichord. The composer Christian Ritter spent much of his career working at the Swedish court and the handful of his k eyboard works that survive, including this Suite in F-sharp minor, suggest the loss of great ric hes. Speaking of wonderful melodies, it would be hard to beat the noble tune that Handel serves us in the opening of the Sonata in five parts, HWV288. He obviously thought so, and reused it in a number of other works. Effectively a violin concerto, this is one of m y favourite pieces of Handel, and Simon Standage’s performance has always seemed to me close to ideal. The motet Vestro Principe divino shows us another side of the prolific Vivaldi, who as well as writing some 500 concertos also composed a great quantit y of sacred and secular v ocal music ranging from solo motets to large-scale works for full choir. I’ve chosen another performance by the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, from their mar vellous all-Vivaldi CD with star countertenor Andreas Scholl. When released internationally ten years ago it brought the orchestra the international recognition it deserved, culminating in a sold-out BBC P roms performance at the Royal Albert Hall in 2001 which the critic of The Guardian described as ‘an event that just seemed to stop the audience in its trac ks – and had everyone roaring for more. The whole concert was just bliss, every single stupendous second of it.’ Given the sheer quantity of music that the numerous surviving Bach cantatas contain, it can be difficult for the average listener to keep track of the many individual gems. ABC Classics did all of us a great favour by bringing together the beautiful voices of Sara Macliver and Sally-Anne Russell for a selection some of the most tuneful arias and duets. This delightful disc has been an audience favourite since it was released in 2003. The dance-like duet Entziehe dich eilends evokes the joy of heaven, where the soul who withdraws from the world will find true pleasure. Purcell, too, could cert ainly write a memorable tune and Halcyon Days is so good that for many years it was assumed to be his. In f act it was actually composed by his pupil John Weldon for a performance of The Tempest as late as 1712. It’s simple and satisfying . The singer is Catherine Bott, who also presents Early Music on BBC Radio 3. Little is known about the English composer Robert Parsons but his fine Ave Maria written in the 1560s is a favourite with choirs. There is a strong possibilit y that Parsons, like William Byrd, was a Roman Catholic at a time when this w as dangerous to say the least. Some suggest that the setting may refer as much to Mary Queen of Scots as the Virgin Mary. The versatile Sydney-based chamber choir Cantillation was founded in 2001 by Antony Walker and Alison Johnston and is heard often on ABC Classic FM in live performances and from its many excellent ABC Classics discs. Bach’s son Carl Philipp Emanuel w as court harpsichordist to the flute-playing Prussian monarch Frederick the Great, later becoming director of music f or the city of Hamburg. The author of an influential treatise on keyboard playing, his music, such as this Trio Sonata in C major , represents a fascinating transition between the Baroque and Classical eras, in which elements of both coexist. The Australian fortepianist Geoffrey Lancaster has achieved international recognition since winning the International Mozart Before the violinist Reinhard Goebel sadly decided to disband Musica Antiqua Köln in 2007, the group had made many outstanding recordings for Deutsche Grammophon’s Archiv label. Quite a few previously unheard composers have become a regular part of our musical diet thanks to these dramatic and exciting performances. Reinhard Goebel has long been f ascinated by the celebrated virtuosic Dresden court orchestra that flourished at the same time as B ach’s unhappy years in Leipzig. This led to a series of discs de voted to the music of J ohann David Heinichen who studied in Venice and was a colleague of Bach’s during his halcyon days in Cöthen. Heinichen brought all of these experiences with him to the Dresden court of Augustus the Strong who ruled simultaneously as the 14 15 Elector of Saxony, King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania. Augustus is also reputed to ha ve fathered more children out of wedlock than any other European monarch. Dresden was full of religious tensions that would explode in later years but its legacy of fine porcelain and great music, including Heinichen’s Concerto in F major, can still give us much pleasure. Reinhard Goebel remains one of the most impressive musical intellects alive and his career as a conductor promises ne w illuminations for music lovers and musicians, as members of the Melbourne S ymphony Orchestra recently discovered when working with him. Executive Producers Martin Buzacott, Robert Patterson Mastering Albert Zychowski, Sony DADC Editorial and Production Manager Hilary Shrubb Publications Editor Natalie Shea Booklet Design Imagecorp Pty Ltd Cover Photo Carlos Davila / Getty Images Simon Healy Presenter, Up Late 10.30pm – 12.30am Monday – Thursday nights on ABC Classic FM For details, visit abc.net.au/classic For ABC Classic FM Manager Richard Buckham Program Director Wendy McLeod Marketing Manager Emma Paillas ABC Classics thanks Alexandra Alewood, Katherine Kemp and Virginia Read. CD1 6-8, 0-%, &, *, CD2 1-7, 9, ^-(, ¡-¢ licensed from Universal Music Australia Pty Limited. 1983 CD1 &; 1989 CD1 8; 1995 CD1 7, CD2 ( Decca Music Group Limited. 1985 CD2 ^-*; 1986 CD1 %; 1993 CD1 0, CD2 ¡-¢; 1997 CD1 6; 2006 CD2 1-3 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Hamburg . 1990 CD1 *, CD2 7, 9; 1992 CD2 4-6; 1996 CD1 !-$ Universal International Music B.V. 1997 CD2 $; 1998 CD2 8; 2000 CD2 0-£; 2003 CD2 %, ); 2005 CD1 9; 2008 CD1 ^; 2009 CD1 1-5 Australian Broadcasting Corporation. This compilation was first published in 2010 and any and all copyright in this compilation is o wned by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. © 2010 Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Distributed in Australia and New Zealand by Universal Music Group, under exclusive licence. Made in Australia. All rights of the owner of copyright reserved. Any copying, renting, lending, diffusion, public performance or broadcast of this record without the authorit y of the copyright owner is prohibited. 16 17 with ABC Classic FM The world’s most beautiful music Nothing soothes the stress of ever yday life like classical music. And you can trust ABC Classic FM to bring you the right kind of music just when you need it. No wonder over one million people every week are inspired, recharged and indulged with the relaxing sounds of ABC Classic FM. And now the world’s most beautiful music is only a clic k away. Listen online to ABC Classic FM or hear ag ain your favourite program. Go to abc.net.au/classic 18 19