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Telemann's Poland
Georg Philipp Telemann

Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy

Telemann's Poland

Format: CD
Label: Ayros
UPC: 5902768283044
Catnr: AYCD 01
Release date: 02 June 2017
1 CD
 
Label
Ayros
UPC
5902768283044
Catalogue number
AYCD 01
Release date
02 June 2017

"Two warmly recommended CDs with Polish dances, on the label Ayros"

Stretto, 27-7-2018
Album
Artist(s)
Composer(s)
Press
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DE

About the album

"Justly one praises what rejoices the heart:
All the world dance to songs of Polish art;
So with ease this statement I deliver should:
Music of the Poles is not made of wood."
Georg Philipp Telemann

The years 1681-1767 constitute the frame of Telemann’s lifetime. He was an outstanding German composer who lived and worked in the late Baroque – the same age as the masters Bach and Händel. Although nowadays his famous contemporaries often overshadow him, in his lifetime he was known as one of the most productive and versatile musicians. After centuries of neglect, his character and creativity seem to be winning that respect once again.

One of the influences of Telemann’s inexhaustible melodic invention was his close contact with Polish music. He worked in Silesia – in Żary (Sorau) and Pszczyna (Pless) at the court of Count Erdmann II – courtier, friend, Privy Councillior, and finally the Cabinet Minister for the King of Poland and Elector of Saxony August II. With Erdmann, Telemann had travelled through the Republic, stopping at roadside taverns and inns where he listened in admiration and amazement to the Polish players who entertained the people with popular melodies.

In his diary he mentioned these visits, “It is hard to believe how wonderful the ideas of those pipers and fiddlers are when, during a break in the dancing, they begin to improvise. Listening to them with attention, in eight days a man could collect enough musical ideas for his whole life!”
Telemann was a practical man and appreciated the treasures he found in that store of Polish music. As he said, he had collected many ideas and much inspiration, which the number of his compositions can be an evidence of, in which there are rhythms and phrases typical to Polish dances. In another place he writes, “I am grateful for my acquaintance with the players of Polish music, and I must say that I found a lot of good and diverse ideas in it. The material has served me well in a number of court compositions.” For years to come Telemann was to use the melodies he had heard in Polish palaces and taverns and he constantly referred to the Polish musical style in the highest terms.

In Polish music Telemann saw an autonomous style, in addition to the three widely recognized and imitated musical schools of French, German and Italian origins known in Europe at that time. He put the Polish style next to these three schools and made it equally important. Thus, his observations and descriptions are very valuable indications for us today in reconstructing the musical character of his time.

The name of the project and the ensemble refers to this tragic time. For the Polish people the beginning of the 18th century was a time of lush diversity of musical culture. On the other hand – and perhaps above all – it was the “time of the plague.” Life is a joyous procession of dance but let us not lose sight of the quirks of fate and our inevitable end.
Poolse volksmuziek was een inspiratiebron voor de componist Telemann. Dit album getuigt ervan. Geniet van de karakteristieke Poolse ritmes en dansfrases, van doedelzak en vedel, de voorloper van onze viool.

"Justly one praises what rejoices the heart:
All the world dance to songs of Polish art;
So with ease this statement I deliver should:
Music of the Poles is not made of wood."
Georg Philipp Telemann

De Duitse Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767) was een opmerkelijk componist die leefde en werkte tijdens de late Barok, in hetzelfde tijdperk als Bach en Händel. Hoewel hij tot op de dag van vandaag in de schaduw staat van zijn beroemde tijdgenoten, was dat tijdens zijn leven wel anders. Toen stond hij bekend als een productief en veelzijdig musicus. En nu, na eeuwen, lijkt het erop dat er meer erkenning en respect bestaat voor de creativiteit van Telemann.

Telemann voert ons terug naar het Polen aan het begin van de 18e eeuw

Zijn onuitputtelijke en melodische creativiteit werd onder meer gevoed door Telemanns sterke band met de Poolse muziek, die ontstond in de tijd dat hij in Silezië voor rijksgraaf Erdmann II werkte. Met hem trok Telemann door de Poolse Republiek, waar ze in tavernes en herbergen langs de weg, met verbazing en bewondering luisterden naar de Poolse musici die het publiek met, hun zo geliefde, volksmuziek vermaakten. Hij schreef in zijn dagboek: "Het is moeilijk te geloven hoe wonderschoon de ideeën van deze fluitisten en fiedelaars zijn, als ze in de danspauzes beginnen te improviseren. Aandachtig luisterend kan een mens, in acht dagen tijd, voor een leven lang muzikale ideeën opdoen."

Verrukkelijke muziek met Poolse invloeden

De componist zou de melodieën die hij hoorde nog jarenlang gebruiken als inspiratiebron voor zijn composities. Hij uitte constant zijn waardering voor de Poolse muzikale stijl, die hij zag als een autonome stijl en die hij even belangrijk vond als de in Europa wijdverbreide Italiaanse, Duitse en Franse muziekstijlen.

Het leven is een opgewekte optocht van dans en muziek

Telemanns muziek voert ons terug naar Polen, aan het begin van de 18e eeuw, waar toen een levendige en vrolijke muziekcultuur heerste. Vaak dé remedie in moeilijke tijden. Want schijn bedriegt. Het waren tragische tijden, met de verschrikkingen van de Grote Noordse Oorlog en de pest, waaraan 20% van de Poolse bevolking overleed. De naam van het ensemble verwijst er naar: het Orkest uit de Tijd van de Pest. "Het leven is een opgewekte optocht van dans en muziek, maar laten we de streken van het noodlot en ons onvermijdelijke einde niet uit het oog verliezen." De oplettende luisteraar zal deze uitspraak in de laatste melodie van dit album herkennen.

Lees ook de recensie van Michel Dutrieue van Stretto
Telemann war unter solchen Meistern wie Bach und Händel ein herausragender deutscher Komponist. Er wirkte im Spätbarock und seine Lebensdaten 1681-1767 umzäunen seinen Lebensrahmen. Obwohl er bis heute im Schatten seiner berühmten Kollegen bleibt, galt er zu seinen Lebzeiten als einer der fruchtbringendsten und vielseitigsten Künstler. Sein Leben und Werk scheinen zurzeit wieder mehr Anerkennung zu gewinnen. Die besonders ausgeprägte musikalische Kreativität Telemanns wurde unter anderem durch die Erfahrung mit der polnischen Musik geprägt, mit der er engen Kontakt pflegte. Er arbeitete in Schlesien – Sorau und Pleß beim Reichsgrafen Erdmann ii von Promnitz, einem Höfling, Freund, heimlichen Berater und nicht zuletzt einem Minister bei August II, dem König von Polen und Kurfürsten von Sachsen. Telemann reiste mit ihm quer durch die Republik Polen. In deren Gast- und Wirtshäusern hörte er bewundernd dem Spiel der polnischen Musiker und den Melodien zu, die dort beliebt waren.
Dies belegen die Worte aus seiner Autobiografie: Man sollte kaum glauben, was dergleichen Bockpfeiffer oder Geiger für wunderbare Einfälle haben, wenn sie, so oft die Tanzenden ruhen, fantasieren. Ein Aufmerkender könnte von ihnen, in 8. Tagen, Gedanken für ein ganzes Leben erschnappen. Telemann wusste als Pragmatiker solche Kunst entsprechend zu schätzen. Er schöpfte aus dem Schatz der polnischen Musik wie aus dem Vollen, was seinen zahlreichen Kompositionen zu entnehmen ist, die sich durch charakteristische polnische Rhythmen und Tanzphrasen auszeichnen. An anderer Stelle schreibt er wie folgt: Genug, in dieser Musik steckt überaus viel gutes, wenn gehörig damit umgegangen wird. Ich habe, nach der Zeit,verschiedene grosse Concerte und Trii in dieser Art geschrieben, die ich in einen italienischen Rock, mit abwechselten Adagi und Allegri, einkleidet.
Melodien, die Telemann an Höfen oder in Wirtshäusern kennen lernte, waren für ihn über die Jahre eine Inspiration. Er äußerte sich immer mit Respekt über den polnischen Musikstil. Angesichts der Autonomie der polnischen Musik, die für ihn einen großen Wert darstellte, unterscheidet Telemann vier Musikstile, deren sich das damalige Europa bediente. Unter den allgemein anerkannten und praktizierenden Musikstilen wie dem italienischen, französischen und deutschen erhebt er den polnischen zu einem gleichgestellten Musikstil. Die Schriften und Bemerkungen Telemanns stellen heutzutage für uns, die wir den musikalischen Charakter seiner Epoche zu rekonstruieren suchen, einen wertvollen Wegweiser dar.

Artist(s)

Paweł Iwaszkiewicz (conductor)

Recorder and transverse flute performer studied with Michael Meltzer at the Academy of Music and Dance in Jerusalem. He improved his skills at master classes with Ricardo Kanji and Robert Ehrlich. He cooperated with numerous early music ensembles (Ars Cantus, Warsaw Chamber Opera, Morgaine, Brevis Consort, Camerata Cracovia and others), National Philharmonic in Warsaw and traditional music (Kapela Brodów, Arboretum Project, Open Folk) with which he recorded over 30 CDs. In addition to baroque music also plays contemporary repertoire, Renaissance, medieval and traditional on transverse flutes, shawm, bagpipes and dulcians. Author of music for theater performances, founder of the ensembles Dancerye, Open Folk, Orkiestra Czasu Zarazy, Yełdyryn. He is also co-founder of the renaissance flute quartet 'Epithalamion' and member of the project 'Path of Dance', illustrating the common roots...
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Recorder and transverse flute performer studied with Michael Meltzer at the Academy of Music and Dance in Jerusalem. He improved his skills at master classes with Ricardo Kanji and Robert Ehrlich. He cooperated with numerous early music ensembles (Ars Cantus, Warsaw Chamber Opera, Morgaine, Brevis Consort, Camerata Cracovia and others), National Philharmonic in Warsaw and traditional music (Kapela Brodów, Arboretum Project, Open Folk) with which he recorded over 30 CDs.
In addition to baroque music also plays contemporary repertoire, Renaissance, medieval and traditional on transverse flutes, shawm, bagpipes and dulcians.
Author of music for theater performances, founder of the ensembles Dancerye, Open Folk, Orkiestra Czasu Zarazy, Yełdyryn. He is also co-founder of the renaissance flute quartet "Epithalamion" and member of the project "Path of Dance", illustrating the common roots of Polish and Swedish traditional music. He recorded the CD "Cantigas de Santa Maria", together with the rock singer Maciej Maleńczyk in 2006 and performed throughout Europe and in the USA, Japan, and Taiwan. He holds masterclasses in the field of flute playing and medieval reed instruments. He is also a graduate of the Faculty of Law at the University of Warsaw.

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Witold Broda (violin)

Piotr Wawreniuk (trombone)

Composer(s)

Georg Philipp Telemann

Georg Philipp Telemann (14 March 1681 – 25 June 1767) was a German Baroque composer and multi-instrumentalist. Almost completely self-taught in music, he became a composer against his family's wishes. After studying in Magdeburg, Zellerfeld, and Hildesheim, Telemann entered the University of Leipzig to study law, but eventually settled on a career in music. He held important positions in Leipzig, Sorau, Eisenach, and Frankfurt before settling in Hamburg in 1721, where he became musical director of the city's five main churches. While Telemann's career prospered, his personal life was always troubled: his first wife died only a few months after their marriage, and his second wife had extramarital affairs and accumulated a large gambling debt before leaving Telemann. Telemann was one of the most prolific composers in history (at least in terms of surviving oeuvre) and was considered by his contemporaries to be...
more
Georg Philipp Telemann (14 March 1681 – 25 June 1767) was a German Baroque composer and multi-instrumentalist. Almost completely self-taught in music, he became a composer against his family's wishes. After studying in Magdeburg, Zellerfeld, and Hildesheim, Telemann entered the University of Leipzig to study law, but eventually settled on a career in music. He held important positions in Leipzig, Sorau, Eisenach, and Frankfurt before settling in Hamburg in 1721, where he became musical director of the city's five main churches. While Telemann's career prospered, his personal life was always troubled: his first wife died only a few months after their marriage, and his second wife had extramarital affairs and accumulated a large gambling debt before leaving Telemann.
Telemann was one of the most prolific composers in history (at least in terms of surviving oeuvre) and was considered by his contemporaries to be one of the leading German composers of the time—he was compared favorably both to his friend Johann Sebastian Bach, who made Telemann the godfather and namesake of his son Carl Philipp Emanuel, and to George Frideric Handel, whom Telemann also knew personally. Telemann's music incorporates several national styles (French, Italian) and is even at times influenced by Polish popular music. He remained at the forefront of all new musical tendencies and his music is an important link between the late Baroque and early Classical styles.

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Press

Two warmly recommended CDs with Polish dances, on the label Ayros
Stretto, 27-7-2018

Telemann's Polish dance
AVROTROS, 09-7-2017

Play album Play album
01.
Dance Polonoise twv 45 : 8, 9
03:41
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
02.
Dance Polonoise twv 45 : 2
03:13
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
03.
Dance Polonoise twv 45 : 11, 7, 30
04:26
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
04.
Dance Polonoise twv 45 : 3
03:01
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
05.
Dance Polonoise twv 45 : 29
03:03
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
06.
Dance Polonoise twv 45 : 16, 15
04:11
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
07.
Dance Polonoise twv 45: 12, 6, 10
03:45
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
08.
Dance Polonoise twv 45 : 1
02:11
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
09.
Dance Polonoise twv 45 : 21
01:55
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
10.
Dance Polonoise twv 45 : 4
01:50
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
11.
Dance Polonoise twv 45 : 14
04:13
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
12.
Dance Polonoise twv 45 : 26
03:09
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
13.
Dance Polonoise twv 45 : 17, 28
03:36
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
14.
Dance Polonoise twv 45 : 20
02:55
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
15.
Dance Polonoise twv 45 : 18
01:25
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
16.
Dance Polonoise twv 45: 13: Marcia Funebre (Anonym xviii w)
04:39
(Georg Philipp Telemann) Paweł Iwaszkiewicz, Olena Yeremienko, Witold Broda, Piotr Wawreniuk, Maciej Kaziński, Mirosław Feldgebel, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy
show all tracks

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