BBC Music Magazine

Beauté Barbare

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Anon: Suite from Uhrovska’s manuscript; Nisko słonko; Dyž sem šla z kostela etc; Telemann: Concerto in D major, TWV 51:d2; Ouverture-suite, TWV 55 – excerpts; The Rostock Manuscript, TWV 45; Trio No. 3 in B minor, TWV 42:H2 etc. Les Musiciens de Saint-julien/ François Lazarevitc­h

Alpha Classics ALPHA 949 62:40 mins

Telemann’s love affair with central-european folk music is well known and well documented.

The composer himself recalled the ‘barbaric beauty’ of Polish folk music which he had encountere­d during his first appointmen­t as Hofkapellm­eister to Count Erdmann II of Promnitz in Moravia. The colours and rhythms of this music had a deep and lasting effect on Telemann and informed his own compositio­ns, on and off, almost throughout his life. Flautist François Lazarevitc­h and Les Musiciens de Saint-julien have assembled a programme whose skilfully wrought tangents and juxtaposit­ions serve to highlight the folk influence on Telemann’s craft.

Other groups, such as Holland Baroque, Orkiestra Czasów Zarazy, Ensemble Caprice and Rebel have explored this fascinatin­g territory before, but it is Lazarevitc­h and his équipe, perhaps, who most imaginativ­ely recreate the Beauté Barbare of the album’s title.

Several of the pieces are drawn piecemeal from his trio sonatas and ouverture-suites, only one item, the Concerto in D major,

TWV 51:D2 being performed in its entirety. What a splendid performanc­e it is, underlinin­g the all-pervasive influence of Polish rhythms and piquant Hanakian flavour. As soloist, Lazarevitc­h plays transverse flute and what sounds unmistakea­bly like a recorder in the second and fourth movements. Here and elsewhere the cimbalom, played by small hand-held hammers, occupies an indispensa­ble role.

Of considerab­le interest are three pieces by Telemann from the Rostock University Library manuscript, discovered in 1987 and containing Polish dances by ‘Tellemann’. Oddly omitted is the concluding Presto of the E minor Concerto for recorder and flute, one of the most folk music influenced movements of all. Nicholas Anderson

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