‘The reserve
collections of the Bibliothèque Royale of Brussels hold the sole printed
copy of Telemann’s Twelve Fantaisies for solo flute. . . . These
fantasias considerably enrich the slender corpus of Baroque works for
flute without bass, alongside two other gems, the Partita of J. S. Bach
and the Sonata in A minor of C. P. E. Bach. A cycle for solo flute of
this kind, arranged by tonalities (the twelve that come most naturally
to the instrument) and rising gradually from the key of A to that of G,
is unique in the repertory. . . . These fantasias, each with its own mood, are miniatures consisting of a succession of three or four
movements in the same key. All of them have in common the concision, the
formal brevity and the rapid alternation of their movements. Telemann
plays on effects of contrast and surprise by switching between opposing
characters and tempi.
‘The open form of the fantasia offers the
composer an ideal field of freedom and expression for his inexhaustible
imagination. A fervent champion of the réunion des goûts (mixed style)
embracing German, Italian, French and Polish tastes, Telemann covered
all the genres, national styles and compositional idioms of his time.’ (François Lazarevitch)
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