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Baroque Bohemia &
Beyond Linek, Koželuh, Brixi, Rejcha
Czech Chamber Philharmonic,
Vojtĕch Spurný |
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Catalog Number: ALC 1003
Number of Discs: 1
Time:
65:13
Price (Includes Shipping)
USA $10
Outside USA $15
Available now! |
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| “One of the
Czech composers to progress from baroque style to that of preclassicism,
Brixi is now credited with preparing Prague for the subsequent arrival of
Mozart whose operas and symphonies were to be performed there with such
success. Koželuh was invited to replace Mozart as court Organist in Salzburg
and later published Mozart’s famous G minor symphony… Rejcha befriended
Beethoven in Vienna and later settled in Paris and taught Berlioz, Gounod,
Franck and Liszt! … The Thirty Years War (1618-48) resulted in the Hapsburgs
taking over the kingdom of Bohemia, but it was impossible to suppress the
Czech love for music, a fact then exploited by the Austrian nobles who
filled their new Bohemian estates with musical talent. Once government had
been transferred to Vienna, many Czech musicians moved away from their
homeland to find work around Europe. As one Czech historian put it: ‘almost
all the musical sources which welled up from the soil of Bohemia sped by the
shortest course to join the main stream of the world’s music’… Some went to
Vienna: Bárta, Koželuh, Vaňhal and the Vranickýs, but some, including the
Benda family went to Berlin, others to Mannheim (eg Stamic and Richter)”
(Peter Avis 2006) |
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| One of a series
of 3 discs focusing on this musical phenomenon. |
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| Individual
Track Details: |
[1]-[3] Jiři Ignác Linek (1725-91): Sinfonia Pastoralis C
Major
[4]-[6] Leopold Koželuh (1747-1818): Symphony in G minor
[7]-[9] František Xaver Brixi (1732-71): Symphony in D major
[10]-[13] Antonín Rejcha (1770-1836) Symphony in Eb major, Op. 41
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