Petzold & Kayser - Harpsichord Music
£21.80 £18.53
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Label: Brilliant Classics
Cat No: 97089
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 6
Genre: Instrumental
Release Date: 6th December 2024
Contents
Artists
Fernando De Luca (harpsichord)Works
Concors digitorum discordia (3 Partitas), op.4Recueil de 25 concerts pour le clavecin
Artists
Fernando De Luca (harpsichord)About
The modern-day reputation of Christian Petzold (1677-1733) is almost wholly based on a single, modest minuet. Known to generations of young pianists as ‘the Minuet in G’, it was included by Bach in one of the notebooks of pieces he gave to his wife, Anna Magdalena, for her instruction. In turn this led to the minuet itself being mistakenly attributed to Bach himself.
Yet much more of Petzold’s output has survived, and only now is it coming to light. Having recorded complete sets of many unsung heroes of the German Baroque, Fernando De Luca now turns to the collection of no fewer than 25 ‘Concertos’ for solo harpsichord by Petzold. Published in 1729 as ‘Receuil des XXV’, the collection first appeared in Dresden, where Petzold was organist to the royal court.
The form of these concertos is Italianate, and their heavily ornate soundworld is recognisable from the better-known example of Vivaldi and Corelli. There are dance movements here and there – including minuets – but the predominant genres are determined by tempo: Allegro, Larghetto, Presto and so on. They make such an immediately attractive effect that it is surprising they are not better known, and this release will attract the attention of all adventurous listeners to Baroque rarities.
Fernando De Luca pairs the 25 concertos of Petzold with a collection of three ‘Parthias’ – partitas by another name – from an even more obscure figure, Isfrid Kayser. Known as ‘Concors digitorum discordia’, this collection was published in Augsburg in 1746 and conforms to the conventions of a Baroque suite with its graceful sequences of dances, prefaced by a grand overture and concluding with a dashing Presto movement.
As so often, Fernando De Luca demonstrates his abilities to revive this music with lucid phrasing, lively registration and an unfailing sense of Baroque style. Scholarly background on both composers is provided in the booklet with an essay by Francesca Scotti.
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