Georg Philipp TELEMANN (1681-1767)
Fantasias for Viola da Gamba TWV 40:26-37 (1735)
Sonata in D TWV 40:1 (1728)
Paolo Pandolfo (viola da gamba)
rec. Franc-Waret (Églis de Saint Rémi), Belgium, 2017
GLOSSA GCD920417 [56:05 + 44:53]
The year 2017 has seen a renewed interest in, and a re-evaluation
of, the music of Georg Philipp Telemann. Centred around the 250th
anniversary of the composer’s death on the 25th June,
this has led to the release of many excellent new recordings and reissues.
This recording, the finest I have heard, arrives late to the celebrations.
The Fantasias were published as a subscription in Hamburg in 1735 by
Telemann’s own publishing house. They were until recently regarded
as lost, despite him having subscribers in most of the main musical
centres of Europe. It was not until 2015 that a printed copy of the
Fantasias was discovered in an archive in Osnabrück and published the
following year. This is the third complete recording of the Fantasias
since then, and there has been an arrangement for flute.
The Fantasias were composed at a time when the viola da gamba was beginning
to go out of fashion in mainland Europe, though its popularity survived
a little longer in England. That is why Telemann employed devices in
his compositional style that utilised every aspect of the instruments,
as well as the performer’s abilities. The result was something
quite new and imaginative, a set that exploited counterpoint, fugal
techniques and pizzicato passages to show the instrument at its best.
Ten of the Fantasias are set in three movements, mostly in the fast-slow
fast scheme. Only the Fantasias No. 1 and No. 2 stray from the three-movement
model. The First has two movements, although the first movement has
four distinct sections alternating Adagio-Allegro-Adagio-Allegro. In
the Second Fantasia we have four movements; whilst the third movement
could be said to be a nod to the past in the way that it is a reintroduction
of the first-movement Vivace, what follows is something completely different—
a dance in the new Galant style. This is not the only occasion that
Telemann would employ this device of looking back as well as forward
to the new age in these compositions. For example, in the Fantasia in
E No. 10 he once again employs two contrasting passages in the first
movement, followed by two beautiful dances.
As mentioned above, these Fantasias exploit every aspect of the instrument
and therefore require an expert performer. These seem to have been works
for no mere amateur, and I am glad to say that in Paolo Pandolfo we
have a gambist who is more than up to the task. He exploits every nuance
of this music. He navigates the instrument’s full register with
no apparent effort, moving between the traditional and modern sections
with aplomb, while bringing out all the beauty and panache that Telemann
has to offer in this music. I do not know the other recordings, but
I assume that they would have to be something exceptional to exceed
Pandolfo’s performance.
The performance is matched by the production. The recorded sound is
excellent, and the clarity enables the listener to experience every
aspect of the instrument and the music. The booklet notes, which comprise
an introduction by Paolo Pandolfo as well as an assessment of the music
by Peter Wollny, are exemplary. This is Glossa ending the year on a
very high note.
Stuart Sillitoe