Anton & Carl Stamitz: Concertos for Wind Instruments

11,00

1 CD 

Classical Music 

Supraphon

28 July 2022

In stock

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Description

099925394820

Anton Stamitz:Concerto for Two Flutes and Orchestra in G major
Carl Stamitz:Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra in E flat majorConcerto for French Horn and Orchestra in E flat major

Detailed Presentation

Carl Stamitz:Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra in E flat major
Bohuslav Zahradník (Clarinet)
Prague Chamber Orchestra (Orchestra)František Vajnar (Conductor)
Carl Stamitz:Concerto for French Horn and Orchestra in E flat major
Zdenek Tylšar (Horn)
Prague Chamber Orchestra (Orchestra)František Vajnar (Conductor)
Anton Stamitz:Concerto for Two Flutes and Orchestra in G major
Radomír Pivoda (Flute)Jirí Válek (Flute)
Prague Chamber Orchestra (Orchestra)František Vajnar (Conductor)

The names of the brothers Anton and Carl Stamitz, just like that of their father, Jan Václav Stamic, are primarily synonymous with Mannheim and the local orchestra, which as early as from the middle of the 18th century set new trends in instrumental music.

Both of them arose from this milieu, yet their masterly violin playing was later on admired by listeners in Paris and other European music centres (in Germany England, The Netherlands…). At the end of the 1980s and the beginning of the 1990s, their concertos for wind instruments were performed by musicians no less famous and travelled.

The horn-player Zdenek Tylšar and the clarinettist Bohuslav Zahradník especially are still referred to by specialists with the greatest respect and reverence. In their time, both of them disseminated worldwide the splendid reputation of the Czech “wind school”, also as soloists of the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra. The Stamitz brothers’ concertos afford soloists prodigious scope for virtuosity and musicality.

And on this album the soloists in question make use of it to the full, thereby providing us with the opportunity to enjoy an hour’s worth of music in the style of one of the most significant music centres of the second half of the 18th century.