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A Tribute to Frederick the Great - Flute Concertos at Sanssouci
FREDERICK II of Prussia (1712-1786)
Concerto No. 3 for flute, string orchestra and bass
Franz BENDA (1709-1786)
Concerto in E minor for flute, strings and continuo
C.P.E. BACH (1797-1828)
Sonata in A minor for flute
Johan Joachim QUANTZ (1784-1859)
Concerto in G for flute, strings and continuo
Capriccios in G major and B major
Preludio in D major
Emmanuel Pahud (flute)
Kammerakademie Potsdam/Trevor Pinnock (harpsichord)
rec. live, 16 October 2011, Schloss Sanssouci, Potsdam
HD mastered from HD. Picture Format NTSC 16:9. Sound Formats PCM
Stereo DTS 5.0. Region Code 0 (worldwide)
C MAJOR
711308 [78:00]
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In June 2011 Emmanuel Pahud recorded a disc called ‘The
Flute King’ in which the Berlin Philharmonic’s principal
flautist celebrated the 300th anniversary of Frederick
the Great’s birth. In September he marked that event with
a concert at the Royal Theatre of Potsdam’s New Palace,
set in the Sanssouci, a World Heritage site. Pahud was accompanied
by the Kammerakademie Potsdam, directed by Trevor Pinnock and
the repertoire performed focused, as did the disc, on court
composers such as J.J. Quantz, C.P.E Bach, Franz Benda, and
Frederick himself. The disc
was beautifully produced and I greatly enjoyed it. The DVD under
review covers some of the same ground and is, in a sense, complementary.
The film opens up the concert element via a little, slightly
camp conceit in which the flautist, dressed as Frederick, cavorts
or strolls around his grounds. These linking perambulations
finish as the music begins or slightly overlap. The CDs were
split between concertos and sonatas, but here there is a degree
more variety in a shorter space of time.
The Bohemian Franz Benda contributes a Concerto in E minor.
He joined the King’s retinue in 1733. He mainly wrote
for the violin, his own instrument, but composed four fluent
and attractive flute concertos. The first movement cadenza is
dispatched with regal insouciance, and there’s a warm
slow movement. Benda was an important early figure at court
but the biggest influence came from Johann Joachim Quantz, who
was Frederick’s musical mentor, hired at an astronomically
high salary. His quietly confident Concerto in G is very much
of its time, full of (once again) Vivaldian influence and also
a refined lyricism. The sole example of Frederick’s Concerto
writing in this disc - he wrote four altogether - comes in the
shape of his Third Concerto. It reflects the surety of Quantz’s
teaching, but Frederick also evinces some personalised touches
such as strong rhythmic framing devices, and winning colours
and effects in the slow movement. It’s a very competent
and engaging work.
Pahud takes on C.P.E. Bach’s Sonata in A minor for solo
flute. This had a precedent in JS’s own solo flute work
of 1718, but C.P.E. is his own man, and the angularity of the
music and the clever intervallic writing are a constant source
of interest. The Quantz Capriccios and the Preludio were not
in the CD but attest to the composer’s agility of mind,
as does the solo Preludio in D major which Pahud plays.
A few more words about the production: the trompe l'oeil
set is gorgeous, the theatre being quite intimately sized. There
are a number of good angled shots directed by Beatrix Conrad
that take advantage of the lavish interiors. One gets a strong
sense of energy from the standing players and from the directing
Pinnock on such an intimate stage. One oddity is that Pahud
plays the Capriccio in G minor in black jacket and roll neck
jumper in one of the palatial rooms, not in the theatre before
the audience. The companion B major is played in the theatre.
As the pre-Benda Concerto perambulation by Pahud, dressed as
Frederick, ends we follow him through the doors into the theatre
and to his seat amongst amused audience members. A sleight of
hand because on stage is Pahud. We’ve been had, and nicely
so.
It’s an enjoyable DVD, and whilst it’s complementary
and indeed overlaps the two CD set in terms of repertoire, it’s
rather more of a once-only experience.
Jonathan Woolf
see also review of the Blu-ray release by Kirk
McElhearn
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