Přemysl Vojta / Fabrice Millischer / Haydn Ensemble Prague / Martin Petrák MICHAEL & JOSEPH HAYDN Horn Concertos
It is difficult to ascertain how many horn concertos Joseph Haydn and
his younger brother Michael actually wrote. Certain works are lost;
others are erroneously ascribed, or their authenticity is at least
doubtful. One of the concertos has even been ascribed by different
musicologists to Joseph and to Michael Haydn, but it may have been
written by another person entirely. The two brothers wrote most of their
concertos for the widest variety of solo instruments, but usually in
the same type of situation: i.e. once they had assumed important posts
at the head of renowned court orchestras. Joseph Haydn became
Kapellmeister for the Ezterházy princes in 1761, and Michael became
concertmaster of the Salzburg archdiocese court orchestra in 1763.
The court musicians in both orchestras were virtuosos in their own right, and one of the tasks of a Kapellmeister consisted in composing new works that permitted them to display their outstanding abilities in the presence of their sovereigns. (Excerpt from the liner notes by Dr. Arnim Raab, Haydn-Institut)
The court musicians in both orchestras were virtuosos in their own right, and one of the tasks of a Kapellmeister consisted in composing new works that permitted them to display their outstanding abilities in the presence of their sovereigns. (Excerpt from the liner notes by Dr. Arnim Raab, Haydn-Institut)
Comentarios
Publicar un comentario