Georg Friedrich Händel: Die großen Händel-Oratorien - CD, Choir Coach, multimedia | Carus-Verlag

Georg Friedrich Händel Die großen Händel-Oratorien

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“The finest Composition of Musick that ever was heard” – this was only one of the enthusiastic press reviews written after the world premiere of Handel’s Messiah. Handel’s oratorios were, overall, already very popular during his lifetime and were frequently performed. Since 2009, Carus has been issuing a CD series with Handel’s oratorios as well as select vocal works, operas and instrumental compositions. Now a box containing 13 CDs and comprising several large-scale oratorios has been compiled: it includes, in addition to Messiah, Alexander’s Feast, Israel in Egypt, Brockes-Passion, Solomon as well as the relatively unknown gem L'Allegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderato. The artists on this CD collection include the Kölner Kammerchor under Peter Neumann, Kammerchor Stuttgart under Frieder Bernius, Vocalensemble Rastatt under Holger Speck and Winchester Cathedral Choir under Nicolas McGegan.

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  • Sinfonia
  • Chor: Greift zu, schlagt tot
  • Rezit. (Tochter Zion): Verwegner Dorn
  • Rezit. (Evang.): Und eine dicke Finsternis
  • Recitative (Tenore): The praise of Bacchus
  • Arioso (Soprano): Softly sweet, in Lydian measures
  • Chorus: The many rend the skies
  • Ouverture – Menuet
  • Quartet: When the ear heard him
  • Quartet: They shall receive
  • Air (Alto): Their land brought forth frogs
  • Chorus: Thy right hand, O Lord
  • 3. Aria (Soprano): Come, thou goddess fair and free
  • 9. Accompagnato (Soprano): Come, pensive nun
  • 21. Aria (Soprano): Far from all resort of mirth
  • 33. Aria (Tenore): There let Hymen oft appear
  • 7. And he shall purify
  • 15. Chorus: Glory to God in the highest
  • 21. Chorus: Surely He hath borne our griefs
  • 43. Air (Basso): The trumpet shall sound
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Additional material
  • Ouvertüre – Menuett

    1. Rezitativ (Tenore) Aus Harmonie, aus heil’ger Harmonie
    erwuchs dies Weltall, endlos weit.

    2. Accompagnato (Tenore) Als formlos die Natur noch war
    und ganz verworren lag,
    sich selbst noch kaum bewußt,
    klang wie Musik des Schöpfers Wort:
    „Erstarrte Welt, wach’ auf!“
    Da ordneten sich Kalt und Heiss,
    und Feucht und Trocken schieden sich,
    gehorchend der Musik.

    3. Chor Aus Harmonie, aus heil’ger Harmonie
    erwuchs dies Weltall, endlos weit:
    Von Harmonie zu Harmonie
    durchlief die Schöpfung aller Töne Klang
    zur letzten Stufe, die da war der Mensch.

    4. Arie (Soprano)

    ...

  • Ouverture – Menuet

    1. Recitative (Tenore) From harmony, from heav’nly harmony This universal frame began.

    2. Accompagnato (Tenore) When nature underneath a heap
    of jarring atoms lay,
    and could not heave her head,
    the tuneful voice was heard from high,
    arise ye more than dead.
    Then cold, and hot, and moist, and dry,
    in order to their stations leap,
    and Music’s pow’r obey.

    3. Chorus From harmony, from heav’nly harmony
    this universal frame began:
    from harmony to harmony
    through all the compasss of the notes it ran,
    the diapason closing full in man.

    4. Air (Soprano)

    ...

  • Avant-propos de l’édition Carus 10.372

    Markus Schwering>
    Traduction : Sylvie Coquillat

    Depuis le 15ème siècle, sainte Cécile, martyr romaine dès débuts du christianisme, fait l’objet d’un culte, les protestants en faisant même plus tard la protectrice de la musique d’église. D’un point de vue historique, la synthèse religieuse et musicale qu’elle incarne et qui est glorifiée dans la légende n’a aucune substance. Ce qui n’affecte en rien le culte cécilien – depuis des siècles, le 22 novembre fut et est célébré comme jour de sa commémoration par une fête de sainte Cécile accompagnée de prestations musicales. C’est aussi le cas à l’époque de Haendel à Londres. Depuis 1683, une Musical Society organise les festivités correspondantes, qui comprennent chaque fois la représentation d’une œuvre nouvelle avec référence thématique adéquate. Lorsque Haendel compose Alexander’s Feast et l’Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day, il s’inscrit donc dans une

    ...

  • Parte Prima

    L’Allegro 1. Accompagnato (Tenore) Hence! loathed Melancholy,
    of Cerberus and blackest midnight born,
    in Stygian Cave forlorn
    ’mongst horrid shapes, and shrieks,
    and sights unholy!
    Find out some uncouth cell,
    where brooding darkness spreads
    his jealous wings,
    and the night Raven sings;
    there under Ebon shades,
    and lowbrow’d Rocks,
    as ragged as thy Locks,
    in dark Cimmerian desert ever dwell.

    Il Penseroso 2. Accompagnato (Soprano) Hence! vain deluding Joys,
    dwell in some idle brain,

    ...

  • Text from the CD Carus 83.395

    Markus Schwering
    Translation: David Kosviner

    The winter of 1740 was a severe one for the Londoners: the British capital experienced the worst cold in human memory, and the Thames was frozen over for several weeks. In the figurative sense, too, Handel had every reason to tremble – namely for the success of the new vocal work which he had completed within 17 days in January. After all, the frost had already prevented a performance of Acis and Galatea. On 27 February however, for the premiere of L’Allegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderato, every conceivable strategic measure had been taken against the frost. As the Daily Post reported, several fires were blazing during the concert at the Theatre Royal in Lincoln’s Inn Fields – and the music must also have played a part in warming up the first audience to hear it. Its positive reception is demonstrated by the fact that L’Allegro was performed repeatedly during

    ...

  • Booklet-Text der CD Carus 83.395

    Markus Schwering

    Der Winter des Jahres 1740 war hart für die Londoner: Die britische Hauptstadt erlebte die schlimmste Kälte seit Menschengedenken, und die Themse war über Wochen hinweg zugefroren. Händel hatte allen Grund, auch im übertragenen Sinn zu zittern – nämlich um den Erfolg seines neuen Vokalwerks, das im Januar innerhalb von 17 Tagen fertiggestellt worden war. Der Frost hatte immerhin schon eine Aufführung von Acis und Galatea verhindert. Indes waren am 27. Februar, als L’Allegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderato seine Premiere hatte, alle nur denkbaren strategischen Maßnahmen gegen die Kälte ergriffen worden. Im Theatre Royal in Lincoln’s Inn Fields loderten, wie die London Daily Post berichtete, während des Konzerts mehrere Feuer. Eingeheizt haben muss den ersten Zuhörern aber auch die Musik. Dass diese gut ankam, ist allein

    ...

  • Sinfonia

    1. Soli and Chorus (Chorus of Believers) Come, ye cast out sinners,
    death’s children, behold, here life doth end.
    Your death with him shall die,
    his ruin be your salvation.

    2a. Recitative (Evangelist) When Jesus sat down at the table
    and with his disciples was eating the Easter lamb,
    the symbol of his death,
    he took the bread,
    and gave thanks to the Highest and broke it,
    gave it to them and said:

    2b. Accompagnato (Jesus) This is my body, take and eat it;
    so you will not forget me.

    3. Aria (Daughter of Zion) God, for whom the infinite heavens,
    and all space as space is too small,
    is present here, in an unfathomable way,

    ...

  • Sinfonia

    1. Soli und Chor (Chor der gläubigen Seelen) Kommet, ihr verworfnen Sünder,
    Todeskinder, seht, hier stirbt das Leben.
    Euer Tod soll mit ihm sterben,
    sein Verderben wird euch Rettung geben.

    2a. Rezitativ (Evangelist) Als Jesus nun zu Tische saß,
    und er das Osterlamm, das Bild von seinem Tod,
    mit seinen Jüngern aß,
    nahm er das Brot,
    und wie er es, dem Höchsten dankend brach,
    gab er es ihnen hin, und sprach:

    2b. Accompagnato (Jesus) Das ist mein Leib: Kommt, nehmet, esset,
    damit ihr meiner nicht vergesset.

    ...

  • Text from the CD Carus 83.424

    Till Reininghaus
    Translation: Elizabeth Robinson

    Barthold Heinrich Brockes’ poem Der für die Sünde der Welt gemarterte und sterbende Jesus is one of the most influential and best-known Passion libretti of the early 18th century. For George Frideric Handel was by no means the only composer to set the text by the poet and future Hamburg city councilor Brockes. Shortly after the oratorio libretto was published in 1712 Reinhard Keiser, director of the Theater am Gänsemarkt, turned his attention to it. In 1716 Georg Philipp Telemann presented his own Brockes Passion for a Passion performance in Frankfurt; two years later, Johann Mattheson, the music director at Hamburg Cathedral, also decided to set the text. Handel’s setting, which was first performed in public on 3 April 1719 in the Refektorium of Hamburg Cathedral, therefore stands in the context of a whole series of compositions which are based

    ...

  • Booklet-Text der CD Carus 83.424

    Till Reininghaus

    Barthold Heinrich Brockes’ Dichtung Der für die Sünde der Welt gemarterte und sterbende Jesus gehört zu den einflussreichsten und bekanntesten Passionslibretti des frühen 18. Jahrhunderts. Denn Georg Friedrich Händel war keineswegs der einzige, der den Text des Dichters und späteren Hamburger Ratsherrn Brockes vertonte. Bereits kurz nach Erscheinen des Oratorienlibrettos 1712 hatte sich der Direktor des Theaters am Gänsemarkt Reinhard Keiser der Dichtung angenommen. 1716 legte Georg Philipp Telemann für eine Frankfurter Passionsaufführung eine eigene Brockes-Passion vor; zwei Jahre später entschied sich der Hamburger Domkantor Johann Mattheson ebenfalls für den Text. Händels Vertonung, die am 3. April 1719 erstmals öffentlich im Refektorium des Hamburger Doms unter Matthesons Leitung erklang, steht somit174 im Kontext einer ganzen Reihe von Kompositionen,

    ...

  • Erster Teil

    1. Sinfonia

    2. Accompagnato (Tenor) Tröstet, tröstet (ihr) mein Volk,
    sagt eur Gott,
    redet freundlich mit Jerusalem
    und rufet ihr zu,
    dass ihr Frondienst ein Ende hat,
    dass ihre Missetat vergeben.
    Vernehmt die Stimme des Rufers in der Wüste:
    bereitet dem Herrn den Weg
    und bahnt in der Steppe
    den Weg unserm Gott.
    Jes 40,1–3

    3. Arie (Tenor) Alle Täler sollen sich heben,
    und Berg und Hügel werden flach.
    Was krumm ist, werde grad
    machet ebene Bahn im Hügelland.
    Jes 40,4

    4. Chor

    ...

  • Part the first

    1. Sinfony

    2. Accompagnato (Tenore) Comfort ye, comfort ye my people,
    saith your God;
    speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem,
    and cry unto her,
    that her warfare is accomplished,
    that her iniquity is pardoned.
    The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness,
    prepare ye the way of the Lord,
    make straight in the desert
    a highway for our God.
    Isa. 40:1–3

    3. Air (Tenore) Ev’ry valley shall be exalted,
    and ev’ry mountain and hill made low,
    the crooked straight
    and the rough places plain.
    Isa. 40:4

    4. Chorus And the glory of the Lord shall be revealed,

    ...

  • Texte du livret du CD Carus 83.219

    Magda Marx-Weber
    Traduction: Sylvie Coquillat

    L’idée de la composition du Messie est initiée par Charles Jennens, le librettiste. Il écrit en juillet 1741 à un ami qu’il espère pouvoir inciter Haendel à composer un nouvel oratorio biblique (« to set another Scripture Collection I have made for him »). Le 22 août 1741, Haendel commence la composition qu’il achève dès le 14 septembre. Le vice-roi irlandais l’invite à donner plusieurs concerts pendant la saison d’hiver 1741/42 à Dublin. Il se rend à Dublin avec quelques chanteurs seulement, sans connaître les conditions du lieu. Dès la première représentation extrêmement réussie de l’œuvre, le 13 avril 1742, il doit adapter quelques airs aux capacités des chanteurs irlandais. Comme il entreprend des modifications de ce genre pour des représentations ultérieures aussi, toute une série d’arias a été conservée dans plusieurs versions.

    ...

  • Text from the CD Carus 83.219

    Magda Marx-Weber
    Translation: Elizabeth Robinson

    The stimulus for the composition of Messiah came from the librettist Charles Jennens. He wrote in July 1741 to a friend, that he hoped to be able to persuade Handel to compose a new biblical oratorio (“to set another Scripture Collection I have made for him”). Handel began work on the composition on 22 August 1741 and completed it on 14 September. He had received an invitation from the Irish viceroy to give several concerts in the 1741–42 winter season in Dublin. He travelled to Dublin with just a few of his own singers, without prior knowledge of the conditions there. Meanwhile, for the extremely successful first performance of the work on 13 April 1742, he had to adapt some of the arias to suit the abilities of the Irish singers. Since he also made alterations of this kind for later performances, a series of arias survive in several versions.

    ...

  • Booklet-Text der CD Carus 83.219

    Magda Marx-Weber

    Die Anregung zur Komposition des Messiah ging von dem Librettisten Charles Jennens aus. Dieser schrieb im Juli 1741 an einen Freund, er hoffe Händel dazu bewegen zu können, ein neues biblisches Oratorium zu komponieren („to set another Scripture Collection I have made for him“). Am 22. August 1741 begann Händel mit der Komposition, die er bereits am 14. September abschloss. Er hatte eine Einladung des irischen Vizekönigs erhalten, in der Wintersaison 1741/42 in Dublin mehrere Konzerte zu geben. Mit nur wenigen eigenen Sängern reiste er nach Dublin, ohne die dortigen Bedingungen zu kennen. Schon für die überaus erfolgreiche Erstaufführung des Werks am 13. April 1742 musste er einige Arien den Fähigkeiten der irischen Sänger anpassen. Da er derartige Veränderungen auch für spätere Aufführungen vornahm, sind eine Reihe von Arien in mehreren Fassungen überliefert.

    ...

  • Erster Teil

    1. Ouvertüre

    2. Rezitativ (Tenore) Es war beim Königsfest, als Persien gewonnen war
    durch Philipps kriegerischen Sohn.
    In erhabener Pracht
    saß der göttergleiche Held
    auf seinem Herrscherthron,
    umringt von seiner tapfern Feldherrn Schar,
    die Ros’ und Myrten froh bekränzt,
    wie sie durch ihren Sieg verdient.
    Zur Seite ihm die liebliche Thais saß
    geschmückt wie eine Braut des Morgenlandes,
    in jugendlichem Glanz und stolzer Freude.

    3. Arie (Tenore) und Chor Glücklich, glücklich, glücklich Paar!
    Allein der Tapfere verdient die Schöne.

    4. Rezitativ (Tenore) Timotheus, der erhöht
    unter den Sängern sitzt

    ...

  • First Part

    1. Ouverture

    2. Recitative (Tenore) ’Twas at the royal feast, for Persia won
    by Philip’s warlike son.
    Aloft in awful state
    the god-like hero sate
    on his imperial throne;
    his valiant peers were plac’d around,
    their brows with roses and with myrtles bound.
    So should desert in arms be crown’d.
    The lovely Thais by his side
    sate like a blooming Eastern bride,
    in flow’r of youth, and beauty’s pride.

    3. Air (Tenore) and Chorus Happy, happy, happy pair!
    None but the brave deserves the fair.

    4. Recitative (Tenore) Timotheus plac’d on high,
    amid the tuneful quire,

    ...

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  • George Frideric Handel put his exceptionally versatile compositional abilities to the test at an early age. After moving to London in 1712, where he was appointed Composer of Musick for His Majesty’s Chapel Royal in 1723, he wrote numerous masterpieces for the royal court as well as his major opere serie. For many years he enjoyed triumphant successes with his operas, which were sung by outstanding performers, with serenades, and later also with oratorios such as Saul and Israel in Egypt. Over the years Handel’s reputation grew far beyond the city where he worked; some of his choral works, particularly Messiah, have enjoyed a performance tradition which remains unbroken to this day, and are sung by choirs throughout the world. Personal details
  • The Kammerchor Stuttgart is regarded as one of the best ensembles of its kind. Over its fifty-year existence, Frieder Bernius has developed the choir into an exceptional ensemble acclaimed by audiences and press alike. This has led to invitations for the choir to perform at all the important European festivals. In Germany the chamber choir performs at festivals and in concert halls in repertoire ranging from the 17th to the 21st century. Frieder Bernius and his ensemble have received numerous accolades for their contribution to new music. The Kammerchor Stuttgart has made over 80 CDs and LPs, numerous of which have been awarded international recording prizes (including the Edison award, Diapason d’or, Gramophone Choice, Classical Internet Award, International Classical Music Award, and German Record Critics’ Award prizes). The International Federation for Choral Music has invited the ensemble to sing at the 1st, 4th and 10th World Symposia on Choral Music in Vienna, Sydney and Seoul. Regular tours of North America and Asia since 1988 and a South America tour reflect the Kammerchor Stuttgart’s international reputation. Since 1984 the top ensemble has also been invited to Israel biennially. Personal details
  • Alongside its dedication to a core repertoire of composers such as Monteverdi, Schütz, Bach, Mozart, Haydn, Schumann, and Brahms, the Vocalensemble Rastatt & Les Favorites frequently explore new terrain with premiere performances. On the heels of its successes in national and international choir competitions, the ensemble has taken part in numerous internationally acclaimed CD recordings as well as radio, and television productions for SWR, Radio France, Deutschlandradio Kultur, and Deutschlandfunk. The Vocalensemble Rastatt & Les Favorites have performed in the Festspielhaus Baden-Baden, the Musikfest Bremen, the Kölner Philharmonie, the SWR RheinVokal Festival, the Europäisches Musikfest Stuttgart, the Schwetzinger Festspiele, the Deutschlandradio Kultur Wartburgkonzerte, the Internationale Musiktage im Dom zu Speyer, the Philharmonie in Mulhouse, and the Centre de Musique “Les Dominicains” in Guebwiller, France, among other venues. The flexible choir does not shy away from excursions into the world of opera, having performed Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor and Bellini’s Norma with Edita Gruberova, and Mozart’s Don Giovanni and Così fan tutte with Rolando Villazón. Together with Klaus Maria Brandauer and the Chamber Orchestra of Europe, the choir also performed Mendelssohn’s Sommernachtstraum at the Musikfest Bremen. The ensemble is sponsored by the German state of Baden-Württemberg in co-operation with its “Kunst 2020” program, as well as by its home city of Rastatt. Personal details
  • Alongside its dedication to a core repertoire of composers such as Monteverdi, Schütz, Bach, Mozart, Haydn, Schumann, and Brahms, the Vocalensemble Rastatt & Les Favorites frequently explore new terrain with premiere performances. On the heels of its successes in national and international choir competitions, the ensemble has taken part in numerous internationally acclaimed CD recordings as well as radio, and television productions for SWR, Radio France, Deutschlandradio Kultur, and Deutschlandfunk. The Vocalensemble Rastatt & Les Favorites have performed in the Festspielhaus Baden-Baden, the Musikfest Bremen, the Kölner Philharmonie, the SWR RheinVokal Festival, the Europäisches Musikfest Stuttgart, the Schwetzinger Festspiele, the Deutschlandradio Kultur Wartburgkonzerte, the Internationale Musiktage im Dom zu Speyer, the Philharmonie in Mulhouse, and the Centre de Musique “Les Dominicains” in Guebwiller, France, among other venues. The flexible choir does not shy away from excursions into the world of opera, having performed Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor and Bellini’s Norma with Edita Gruberova, and Mozart’s Don Giovanni and Così fan tutte with Rolando Villazón. Together with Klaus Maria Brandauer and the Chamber Orchestra of Europe, the choir also performed Mendelssohn’s Sommernachtstraum at the Musikfest Bremen. The ensemble is sponsored by the German state of Baden-Württemberg in co-operation with its “Kunst 2020” program, as well as by its home city of Rastatt. Personal details
  • Winchester Cathedral Choir is one of England's leading cathedral choirs with a repertoire extending from Weelkes and Byrd to Howells, Leighton and Tavener. It consists of 16-20 boy choristers and 12 Lay Clerks. The choirboys receive their schooling at The Pilgrims' School, where they learn to play at least one instrument. The Lay Clerks are experienced musicians, often with careers in singing or teaching. The choir's main commitment is to singing at cathedral services. In addition it gives performances at home and abroad, having sung at the Henry Wood Proms in the Royal Albert Hall with the BBC Symphony Orchestra, and recently in Florence Cathedral. In 2003 the choir appeared with The English Concert in Göttingen in a celebrated performance of Handel's Jephtha. Personal details
  • The FestpielOrchester Göttingen (FOG) has convinced audiences and critics alike since its foundation in 2006, and it is especially appreciated for the richness of its tone color and its light, flexible and sensual sound. The FOG includes specialists in authentic period performance practice from such internationally famous early music ensembles as Les Arts Florissants, the Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin, Concerto Köln, the Freiburger Barockorchester, the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra (San Francisco), Il Complesso Barocco, and the Orchestra of the 18th century. Under the direction of Nicholas McGegan they have become a homogeneous ensemble, which has confirmed the reputation of the Internationale Händel-FestspieIe Göttingen as an innovative and first class festival. During the 2008 festival season the orchestra has taken part in the oratorio Samson, giving guest performances in Dresden, Hanover, Kassel and Halle/Saale, which aroused enthusiasm in both the audiences and the press: “The Göttinger play like gods” wrote a critic in the Mitteldeutsche Zeitung following the concert in Halle/Saale. During the Handel celebration year 2009, the 250th anniversary of the composer’s death, the FestspielOrchester Göttingen is taking part in a staged opera production at venues including the Drottningholm Slotstheater in Sweden. Personal details
  • The period instrument ensemble Collegium Cartusianum, founded in 1988 as successor to the Barockorchester Koln, has a repertoire ranging from Monteverdi to Brahms. The ensemble’s participation in the complete recording of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s masses conducted by Peter Neumann earned it an outstanding reputation, subsequently confirmed by many concerts, radio broadcasts and CD recordings. As well as collaborating with the Kolner Kammerchor, the Collegium Cartusianum has also received international acclaim for its performances of J. S. Bach’s Orchestral Suites as well as Mozart and Beethoven symphonies. With Mozart’s Il Re Pastore, Mendelssohn’s St. Paul and Elijah, and Dvo?ak’s Requiem the orchestra has extended its repertoire to include opera and romantic works. It has appeared at many leading festivals in Europe and Japan, recently at the Leipzig Bach Festival with a Handel-Bach program, with Handel’s Serenata Aci, Galatea e Polifemo in Krakow and Essen at the second “Fest fur Alte Musik” in Cologne in February 2012. Personal details
  • The Barockorchester Stuttgart, which was founded by Bernius in 1985, specializes in 18th century music. The musicians are among the leading representatives of historical performance practice and perform exclusively on original instruments. The ensemble dedicates itself to a large extent to the revival of 18th century operas. It has performed at numerous international festivals, among others in Rome, Dresden and Göttingen. Personal details
  • Frieder Bernius’s work has earned great worldwide recognition. He is in demand internationally as a conductor and as a teacher. His principal artistic collaborators are the ensembles he founded himself, the Kammerchor Stuttgart, the Barockorchester Stuttgart, the Hofkapelle Stuttgart and the Klassische Philharmonie Stuttgart. As a guest conductor, he has collaborated repeatedly with, for example, the SWR Vokalensemble Stuttgart, the Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen, the Stuttgarter Kammerorchester and the Streicherakademie Bozen. Great stylistic versatility is Frieder Bernius’s hallmark. Whether he conducts vocal works by Monteverdi, Bach, Händel, Mozart, Beethoven, Fauré and Ligeti, stage music by Mendelssohn or symphonies by Haydn, Burgmüller and Schubert, his work always aims for a sound that is at once unmistakably personal and at the same time oriented towards the original period sound ideal. He devotes himself equally to the rediscovery of 18th century operas and to first performances of contemporary compositions. He is particularly interested in the musical history of southwestern Germany. Carus-Verlag has awarded Frieder Bernius a Golden CD for his complete recording of the sacred music of Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy. The award was presented to him during the German Choir Festival in Stuttgart 2016. The sale of over 250,000 recordings, which has been acclaimed with a number of awards, has made a not insignificant contribution to what today is the obvious presence of Mendelssohn's complete œuvre in the concert repertoire. Personal details
  • In recent years Peter Neumann, born in Karlsruhe, has made a name for himself particularly as a conductor of Handel’s music. This is demonstrated both by the concert series “250 Years Handel Oratorios” which he initiated – performing nine music dramas in accordance with Handel’s concert schedule of 1749–1752 – and by his numerous CD recordings. He has performed masterworks from vocal and orchestral music in the European musical capitals and at many renowned festivals, ranging from Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo and Vespers for the Blessed Virgin (Palais Garnier, Paris) through J. S. Bach’s passions (last in Moscow, Oslo and Versailles) and Mass in B minor (BBC Proms) to Debussy’s Le Martyre de Saint Sébastien at the MusikTriennale in Cologne. 2010, Peter Neumann and his ensembles Kolner Kammerchor and Collegium Cartusianum were guests at the Rheingau Music Festival with Schumann’s Das Paradies und die Peri and at the Schumann Festival in Dusseldorf as well as the Leipzig Bach Festival in 2011. In June 2012 he made his highly acclaimed debut at the Cologne Opera with Handel’s Alcina. As a guest conductor, Neumann has collaborated with, among others, ChorWerkRuhr, the Netherlands Chamber Choir, the SWR Vokalensemble Stuttgart, the NDR Choir, the Schola Cantorum Tokyo, the Concertgebouw Orchestra Amsterdam, the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra, the Junge Deutsche Philharmonie and Concerto Koln. Highlights of his extensive discography include the complete recording of Mozart’s masses (Gramophone “Crown of Crowns”), Schutz’s Musical Vesper, Schumann’s Missa sacra (Diapason d’Or) and recordings of Bach’s St. John Passion and Handel’s Alexander’s Feast and Brockes Passion (Carus). Personal details
  • Holger Speck enjoys an international reputation as a charismatic conductor who succeeds both in realizing stylistic characteristics in an innovative manner and in conveying emotional content. Fanfare magazine from the USA attests to his “undeniable authority.” With his distinctive sense of sound and compelling, lively and authentic interpretations, he shapes the image of his own ensembles as well as the choirs and orchestras with which he works as a guest conductor. The president of the German Bundestag Dr. Wolfgang Schäuble engaged him and his Vocalensemble Rastatt for a concert during the G20 summit. Speck established the Grammy-nominated Vocalensemble Rastatt and the Baroque orchestra Les Favorites internationally with exciting concert programs and outstanding CD recordings on the Carus label containing music by Buxtehude, Telemann, Handel and Brahms, among others. For Deutsche Grammophon productions, he was responsible for the choral sections of the Mozart operas “Die Entführung aus dem Serail,” “Le nozze di Figaro,” “Così fan tutte,” and “Don Giovanni.” Holger Speck teaches at the University of Music in Karlsruhe; in addition to being the artistic director of Vocalensemble Rastatt & Les Favorites, he works as a guest conductor with the NDR Vokalensemble, the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra, the Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin, and the choir and orchestra of the Slovenian Philharmonic Orchestra in Ljubljana, among others. The ballet director John Neumeier engaged Speck to conduct his last major creation “Dona nobis pacem” with Bach’s Mass in B minor at the Hamburg State Opera and the Festspielhaus Baden-Baden. . Personal details
  • For the London Independent Nicholas McGegan is “one of the finest baroque conductors of his generation,” and for the New Yorker magazine, “an expert in 18th century style.” But the Cleveland Plain Dealer was more direct when it praised Nicholas McGegan for “bringing rhythmic zest to all things baroque.” And as such he is known throughout the world for performances that match authority with enthusiasm, scholarship with joy, and curatorial responsibility with evangelical exuberance. Through more than twenty years as its music director, McGegan has established the San Francisco-based Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra as the leading Baroque ensemble in America – and at the forefront of historical performance practice worldwide, thanks to notable appearances at Carnegie Hall, the London Proms, the Amsterdam Concertgebouw, and the International Handel Festival, Göttingen where he has been artistic director since 1991. In Göttingen and with the PBO he has defined an approach to period style that sets the current standard: probing, serious but undogmatic, recognizing that the music of the past does not belong in a museum or in academia, but in vigorous engagement with an audience, for pleasure and delight on both sides of the stage. He has been a pioneer in the process of exporting historically informed practice beyond the small world of period instruments to the wider one of conventional symphonic forces. His discography includes the world premiere recording of Handel’s oratorio Susanna, which attracted both a Gramophone Award and Grammy nomination, and recent issues on Carus of the same composer’s Solomon, Samson, and Acis and Galatea (the latter a rarity in that it unearths the little-known version adapted by Felix Mendelssohn). Born in England, Nicholas McGegan was educated at Oxford, Cambridge and the Royal College of Music, London. His awards include an honorary professorship at Georg-August University, Göttingen, and an official Nicholas McGegan Day, declared by the Mayor of San Francisco in recognition of two decades of distinguished work with the Philharmonia Baroque. He holds an honorary degree at London’s Royal College of Music and the Handel Prize of the Halle Handel Festival. Personal details
  • Antonia Bourvé studied opera and lieder singing with Stephan Kohlenberg and Felicitas Strack at the Hochschule für Musik in Karlsruhe. Her studies continued with master classes with Brigitte Fassbaender and Anna Reynolds, and lieder classes with Mitsuko Shirai and Hartmut Höll. She was awarded a scholarship by the Richard Wagner Association and won first prize in the Kulturfonds Baden opera competition. A much sought-after soprano, Antonia Bourvé’s guest appearances include the title role in Mozart’s Zaide at the Staatstheater Nuremberg. She has also sung on CD recordings of Mozart’s Schauspieldirektor and Beethoven’s Scottish Songs. A further recording, which has been praised as a benchmark recording by the press, is Saint-Saëns’ Oratorio de Noël, conducted by Holger Speck on the Carus label (Carus 83.352) Personal details
  • Born in Montreal, Dominique Labelle first rose to prominence as Donna Anna in Peter Sellar’s production of Mozart’s Don Giovanni, which she performed in New York, Paris and Vienna. Since then she has been celebrated in a repertoire ranging from Bach to 2006 Pulitzer Prize winner, Yehudi Wyner. She has worked with such conductors as Boulez, Zinman and McGegan and is a regular guest soloist in Europe. Highlighting her wide-ranging repertoire are acclaimed performances of Handel’s Belshazzar and Bach’s St. Matthew Passion, as well as works by Mahler, Verdi’s Requiem and Wyner’s songs. She has been enthusiastically received in Göttingen in several roles, including the title-role in Handel’s Rodelinda (2000) and Armida in Rinaldo (2004), as well as Angelica in Orlando (2008) and in the 2001 world premiere of Handel’s Gloria. Notable successes in the operatic field have included the title-role in Lucia di Lammermoor and Violetta in La Traviata. Her discography features works spanning the 17th and 21st centuries; a recording of Handel’s Arminio was awarded the Handel Prize in 2002. Personal details
  • Soprano Claron McFadden trained at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester (New York). Her first appearance at Glyndebourne was in the title role of Alban Berg’s Lulu under Sir Andrew Davis. She has sung the title-role in Handel’s Rodelinda under Trevor Pinnock in Karlsruhe and Semele in Halle, and she has appeared throughout Europe with Les Arts Florissants. As well as performing soprano solos in the major oratorios, Claron McFadden is also a sought-after interpreter of contemporary music, especially the works of Dirk Brossé and Harrison Birtwistle. She sang the Lulu Suite with the Residentie Orchestra under Oliver Knussen as well as solos in Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 14 and Britten’s Les Illuminations in the Concertgebouw. Her numerous CD recordings include Birtwistle’s Paul Celan Songs, Villa-Lobos’s Bachianas Brasileiras, Rameau’s Les Indes Galantes and Purcell’s King Arthur with William Christie, Handel’s Acis and Galatea and Ottone, and a new recording of Alexander Balus with The King’s Consort. Personal details
  • Equally at home on the concert and opera stages, Carolyn Sampson has enjoyed notable successes all over the world. In addition to engagements with, among others, the English National Opera, the Glyndebourne Festival, the Boston Early Music Festival, the Opéra de Paris, the Opéra de Lille, the Opéra de Montpellier as well as the Opéra National du Rhin, she has sung concerts, among others at the BBC Proms. In Europe her many appearances have included concerts with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, The English Concert, Freiburg Baroque Orchestra, Symphony Orchestra of the Bayerischer Rundfunk, WDR Symphony Orchestra, Vienna Philharmonic, Orchestra dell’Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, and the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra. In the US Carolyn Sampson has featured as soloist with San Francisco Symphony, Detroit Symphony Orchestra, St Paul Chamber Orchestra and Philadelphia Orchestra. Her many recordings include a highly-acclaimed CD of Stravinsky’s Les Noces and Mass. Her recording of Purcell songs was selected as Editor’s Choice in the December 2007 issue of Gramophone Magazine, as was her first recital CD, Fleurs, in May 2015. Personal details
  • Internationally Simone Kermes is one of the most sought after sopranos for dramatic roles. Her unusually large vocal range predestined her for the virtuoso works of the baroque masters, but also for soprano roles and arias of Mozart, Haydn and Beethoven. Artistic engagements have taken her to the largest, most famous concert halls in the world. She has given solo concerts in such venues as Carnegie Hall, Tchaikovsky Hall in Moscow, and the Palau de la music in Barcelona. In addition to many radio and television productions she has recorded many CDs. She has received numerous awards for her solo albms, including the annual prize of the German Record Critics, the Diapason d’Or, BBC music choice, Gramophone Disc of the month and the ECHO Classic award. Personal details
  • The soprano Cornelia Winter studied at the Musikhochschulen in Frankfurt and Berlin with Elsa Cavelti and Ingrid Figur, and took part in master classes with Laura Sarti, Barbara Schlick and Paul Esswood. She has made guest appearances at the Nationaltheater Mannheim and the Stadttheater Heidelberg. She has sung with the “Ensemble Modern”, “Concerto Köln”, and “l‘Arpa Festante” in Germany and abroad. An outstanding example of her work to date is the CD “Landschaft mit entfernten Bekannten” by Heiner Goebbels, released in 2007, with the Ensemble Modern and the Deutscher Kammerchor, which was staged at the “Théatre des Amandiers” in Paris. Personal details
  • Soprano Nele Gramß grew up in a family where her broad musical interests began. She studied in Würzburg, Munich and Amsterdam. Initiially she studied school music and viola da gamba, and then singing. Margreet Honig, Barbara Schlick and Monika Bürgener are and were important teachers for her. Although her extensive repertoire encompasses music of all periods and genres, Nele Gramß specialises in music of the 17th century. She most frequently sings the Bach oratorios, Monteverdi, Schütz and other polyphonic vocal works. Next to oratorio, she specialises in chamber music: she is a permanent member of Movimento and the Gesualdo Consort Amsterdam. She also gives Lied recitals with her piano accompanist Annie Gicquel and performs with a wide range of ensembles and orchestras. Last summer she took part in two performances of Honegger’s Jeanne d’Arc. Another recent highlight were staged performances of Handel’s Saul in St. Egidien’s Church in Nuremberg. Personal details
  • Johanna Winkel studied singing with Mechthild Böhme and Caroline Thomas, and attended master classes to augment her education. She gave her international debut in 2008 with Peter Neumann and the Concerto Köln in Nantes. She subsequently performed with, among others, the Hamburg Symphony Orchestra, the SWR Vokalensemble Stuttgart and the SWR Symphony Orchestra as well as the NDR Choir. She has sung, for example, at the Musikfest Berlin, the Lucerne Festival and La Folle Journée. Johanna Winkel has won several prizes for opera singing and was awarded first prize in the Cantilena Singing Competition in Bayreuth. Johanna Winkel has performed various operatic roles in historical performance locations such as the Margravial Opera House in Bayreuth and the Ekhof Theater in Gotha. She can be heard on many live recordings as well as on a number of CD recordings. Personal details
  • Maria Keohane is a Swedish soprano whose repertoire spans a wide spectrum of music styles from baroque to contemporary, including chamber music, opera and oratorios. She has performed in Claudio Monteverdi’s Il Ritorno d’Ulisse in Patria with Gothenburg Theatre, Peri’s Euridice with Drottningholm Court Theatre, and in Verdi’s Don Carlos with The Royal Danish Theatre in Copenhagen. She has sung Brahms’ Requiem at the Gothenburg Concert hall, Bach’s Wedding Cantata with Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra in San Francisco and Handel’s Il Trionfo del Tempo e del Disinganno with Concerto Copenhagen at Wiener Konzerthaus. Maria Keohane is frequently engaged as an oratorio soloist and has appeared as a soloist at arenas including Tanglewood, Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, Halle Handel Festspiele and Edinburgh Festival with conductors such as Jerome Correas, Eric Ericson, Martin Gester, Gustav Leonhardt, Andrew Manze, Nicholas McGegan, Lars Ulrik Mortensen, Andrew Parrott, Stephen Stubbs, Jos van Veldhoven, and Christopher Warren-Green. Personal details
  • Born in the North of England, Soprano Julia Doyle studied at Cambridge University before pursuing a singing career. She is now fast establishing a reputation as a specialist in Baroque repertoire throughout Europe and beyond. Highlights include Bach St John Passion at the Concertgebouw (Gardiner) and St Matthew Passion at Alice Tully Hall in New York (Herreweghe), Handel Occasional Oratorio in Halle (The English Concert), Haydn Scena di Berenice with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra (Noseda), Mozart Exsultate Jubilate at the Cite de la Musique in Paris (Arsys Bourgogne), Handel Messiah at the Royal Albert Hall with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra (Cooke), and in the Palace of Versailles with The King’s Consort (King), Handel arias at the Wigmore Hall (London Handel Orchestra) and with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra (Watkins), Bach BWV 147 with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra (Mena), Christmas Oratorio with RTE Orchestra Dublin (Halls) and BWV 202 with Music of the Baroque in Chicago (Kraemer). Personal details
  • Daniel Taylor is one of the most sought-after countertenors worldwide. He performs with numerous international ensembles and symphony orchestras. As a recitalist, he has performed in the Konzerthaus Vienna, at the Frick Collection New York, in the Forbidden Concert Hall Beijing, Lufthansa Baroque Festival and Wigmore Hall London. He appeared in Jeremy Podeswa’s prize-winning film Five Senses. As an opera singer he has performed at Glyndebourne (Handel’s Theodora), the Metropolitan Opera New York (Handel’s Giulio Cesare), the Bavarian State Opera (Handel’s Rinaldo), Edinburgh (Gluck’s Orfeo), Welsh National Opera (Handel’s Jephtha) and the Canadian Opera (Handel’s Tolomeo). Daniel Taylor studied literature, music and philosophy before studying completing his exams in music and religious studies at the University of Montreal. Daniel Taylor is a professor at the Conservatoire de musi que in Montreal. Personal details
  • The countertenor Tim Mead was a choral scholar at King’s College, Cambridge, where he received his first musical training, later studying singing with Charles Brett. He continued his studies and won several scholarships to the Royal College of Music in London. The young countertenor is concentrating mainly on opera, singing in works ranging from Claudio Monteverdi to world premieres of contemporary works. His most recent operatic engagements include the title roles in Handel’s Giulio Cesare for Glyndebourne Festival Opera, Siroe under Andreas Spering and Ezio for the London Handel Festival. In sacred vocal music, his repertoire includes works by Bach, Telemann and Handel. Tim Mead has been invited to perform the title role in Admeto at the Handel Festival in Göttingen in 2009. Personal details
  • Whilst he was still a student Michael Hofmeister sang at the Staatsoper in Hanover, and in Berlin in a theatre project by Ruedi Häusermann. He performs with conductors including Enrique Mazzola, Konrad Junghänel, Michael Schneider and Holger Speck and directors such as Calixto Bieto, Peter Konwitschny and Trisha Brown. In addition to his operatic engagements, Michael Hofmeister enjoys a busy career in the Baroque music field and has sung at festivals including the Handel Festival in Halle. He sang in Adriana Hölszky’s Hybris and Salvatore Sciarrino’s Da Gelo a Gelov at the Schwetzingen Festival. He has also sung in the Sciarrino work at the Opéra National de Paris and the Grand Théâtre de Genève in the 2007/08 season. Personal details
  • Terry Wey was born in Switzerland and received his first singing lessons as a member of the Vienna Boys’ Choir with Silvija V. Purchar, later studying with Kurt Equiluz and Christine Schwarz. As a boy treble he won prizes in several competitions (including the MIGROS Genossenschaftsbund [Cooperative Society] Zurich, Kärntner-Sparkasse [Savings Bank] and Wörthersee Music Scholarship). His first appearances with the “Clemencic Consort” under René Clemencic in 2003 brought him to the notice of the international concert and opera scene. He has performed with conductors including Thomas Hengelbrock, Marc Minkowski and Michael Hofstetter and orchestras such as the Balthasar-Neumann-Ensemble, Les Arts Florissants and Les Musiciens du Louvre Grenoble. Several CD recordings illustrate his achievements and versatility. Personal details
  • Countertenor Jan Thomer studied singing at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis with Gerd Türk, Dominique Vellard, Ulrich Messthaler and Andreas Scholl. He now studies with Scot Weir in Zürich. He is a prizewinner of the Swiss Youth Music Competition (with distinction) and the Friedl Wald Foundation. He has participated in master-classes with Jakob Stämpfli, Rosa Dominguez and Margreet Honig. As well as singing in the French ensemble Gilles Binchois, he has also performed as a soloist at the Davos Festival “Young artists in concert” (2007) and the Zürich Opera House (2008, 2009). Personal details
  • Mezzo-soprano Elvira Bill studied singing with Christoph Prégardien at the Cologne Musikhochschule. While studying for her Abitur in Mönchengladbach, she received significant encouragement in her vocal studies from Reinhard Becker (Wuppertal). Her repertoire ranges from the established classics to contemporary music. She also studies historical performance practice with the countertenor Kai Wessel. In her solo work, she specializes in oratorio. As a soloist, Elvira Bill has sung under Marcus Creed, Peter Neumann, Robin Gritton, Christopher Hogwood and many other conductors. At the Theater Krefeld-Mönchengladbach she has sung in Friedrich Cerha’s opera Der Riese vom Steinfeld. Concert tours have taken her to many German cities, to France, Austria, the Benelux countries, Italy, Portugal, Hungary, Russia, China and Oman. Personal details
  • Markus Brutscher received his early musical training as a choirboy with the Regensburger Domspatzen and the Augsburg Domsingknaben, before going on to study singing in Berlin, London and Maastricht. He is in constant demand, singing with leading orchestras in Europe and America and with outstanding conductors. His extensive repertoire encompasses works from all musical periods from early Baroque to contemporary. A discography of over 50 recordings illustrates the singer’s versatility. Personal details
  • Upon graduating from The Juilliard School, the young American tenor Michael Slattery sang his first Mozart Requiem with Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. He appeared with the LA Phil in 2006 in Philip Glass’s Akhnaten, and his concert career has also included Handel oratorios and Bach cantatas. Recently he has greatly enjoyed giving his first master classes at Universities across the US. The International Herald Tribune has described Slattery as a singer with an “American gusto that would have made Bernstein smile”, and indeed, his knack for the Maestro’s music has taken him all across Europe: from Paris to the Royal Festival Hall in London where he sang the title role in Bernstein’s Candide, a role he premiered in Rome. Recently Michael sang the title role in Monteverdi's L’Orfeo at Glimmerglass Opera, a role he had already performed with Emmanuelle Haïm at the Châtelet Theater in Paris. Outside his musical activities, Michael Slattery devotes much of his spare time to painting; his works were recently exhibited at Glimmerglass Opera. Personal details
  • Tenor Benjamin Hulett graduated from New College, Oxford. He was a principal singer with the Hamburgische Staatsoper, where his roles included Oronte (Alcina), Jaquino (Fidelio), Arbace (Idomeneo), Tamino (Die Zauberflöte) and Ferrando (Così fan tutte). He made his debuts with the Bavarian State Opera as Oronte, the Theater an der Wien in Johannes Kalitzke’s Die Besessenen, the Salzburg Festival in Elektra, the Baden-Baden Festival in Salome and the Deutsche Staatsoper in Henze’s Phaedra. He sang Arbace with Europa Galante and Biondi, made a return to Hamburg as a guest artist for Tamino and Narraboth (Salome), and sang his first Peter Quint (Turn of the Screw) for Opera North. Recent appearances include Das Paradies und die Peri at the Edinburgh Festival with Norrington, Missa Solemnis with Herreweghe, Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings with Hogwood, Creation with Haim, the Bruckner Requiem with Zehetmair, his first Fenton (Falstaff) for Opera Holland Park, the title role in J. C. Bach’s Lucio Silla with Bolton at the Salzburg Mozartwoche, and Tamino in concert with the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra and Rattle. He makes his debut for the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, as Edmondo in Manon Lescaut. Personal details
  • Virgil Hartinger studied at the Mozarteum in Salzburg, the Eastman School of Music and the Oberlin Conservatory in the USA, and has taken part in master classes with Thomas Hampson, Ernst Haefliger and Richard Miller. He has worked with conductors including Jamie Laredo, Ton Koopman, Peter Neumann, Paul O’Dette, Reinhard Goebel, Christophe Coin and Sigiswald Kuijken. His repertoire ranges from the renaissance to contemporary works in concert and operatic repertoire. While still studying, he began a busy concert schedule which has taken him to the Salzburg Festival, the Folle Journée in Nantes and Lisbon, the Concertgebouw (Amsterdam), Theâtre des Champs Élysées (Paris), Prinzregententheater (Munich) and Carnegie Hall. Personal details
  • James Oxley studied at the Royal College of Music and at Oxford. In 1994 he was awarded first prize at the International Vocal Competition in Holland. Since then, he has performed at the leading concert halls in Europe and further afield. James Oxley sang the role of the Evangelist in J. S. Bach’s St Matthew Passion with Philippe Herreweghe in a performance broadcast throughout Europe. Another of his special interests is French music, where he enjoys a fruitful collaboration with conductors including Herviquet, Christophe Rousset, Martin Gester and Jean-Claude Malgoire. James Oxley has sung the roles of Lensky (Eugene Onegin) and Belmonte (Die Entführung) at the Opera de Rennes, Lucano in Monteverdi’s Poppea at English National Opera, and Ferrando (Così fan tutte), Steersman (Der Fliegende Holländer) and the title role in Candide at the Opera de Rouen. He is a member of the group The Factory, an experimental theatre company in London. James Oxley regularly gives master classes and is a visiting professor at the Royal College of Music, London. Personal details
  • Konstantin Wolff studied with Donald Litaker at the Hochschule für Musik in Karlsruhe. He won the Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy Prize from the Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz, was awarded a scholarship by the German National Academic Foundation and made his opera debut in 2005 at the Opera National de Lyon under William Christie in Monteverdi’s L’incoronazione di Poppea. His concert repertoire ranges from the early baroque to the 20th century. He has performed with conductors including Gerd Albrecht, Alun Francis, Riccardo Chailly, Ton Koopman, René Jacobs, Claudio Abbado, Sir Simon Rattle and Nicholas McGegan. His first solo CD, a recording of Lieder to texts by Victor Hugo, has been enthusiastically received. Personal details
  • Roderick Williams comes from north London and received his operatic training at the Guildhall School of Music. He has sung most of the major Mozart baritone roles for Opera North, as well as Figaro in Rossini's The Barber of Seville. In addition to such English opera composers as Tippett, Birtwistle and Britten, he has performed Henze, Richard Strauss, Stravinsky and Wagner. He has given song recitals at the London Wigmore Hall and at numerous festivals. Recent CD recordings include Lennox Berkeley's A Dinner Engagement, the first recording of Vaughan Williams's Willow Wood with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, and two discs with the pianist Iain Burnside featuring songs by Finzi and Vaughan Williams. His own compositions have been premiered in the Wigmore Hall and Barbican Hall. Personal details
  • Peter Harvey’s hundred or so recordings span eight centuries of music, with the High Baroque particularly well represented. He has performed and recorded all of J. S. Bach’s major vocal works and many of the cantatas. From the French Baroque, he has made many recordings of Campra, Lully, Lalande and others, including a recent solo disc with London Baroque of Rameau’s secular cantatas for bass voice. The Gabrieli Consort’s recording of Haydn’s Creation, on which Peter sings Adam, won the 2008 Gramophone Award. Peter directs the Magdalena Consort, specializing in the performance of the music of Bach with small ensembles. He is increasingly returning to the Lied repertoire, and has recently recorded Schubert’s Die Winterreise with pianist Gary Cooper. Personal details
  • Baritone Michael Dahmen has studied with Christoph Prégardien at the Hochschule für Musik Cologne since 2006. Since then, he has sung in opera and concerts in Germany and abroad, including Italy, France, Switzerland, Brazil and Mexico. On the operatic stage, he has sung the roles of Masetto in Mozart’s Don Giovanni and Dr. Falke in Strauss’s Die Fledermaus. His performances with leading musicians such as the pianist Michael Gees, gamba player Christophe Coin, and conductors Peter Neumann and Marcus Creed have been documented on radio and CD. A former scholarship holder from the Richard Wagner Foundation, Michael Dahmen has performed at the International Bach Festival Schaffhausen and the Beethoven Festival Bonn. Personal details
  • The German bass baritone Andreas Wolf received his first musical education at the Landesgymnasium for music in Wernigerode, Germany, and was also a member of the renowned youth choir Rundfunk-Jugendchor Wernigerode. In 2002 he received a scholarship at the University of Music in Detmold and started his music studies. Andreas Wolf sang the role of Guglielmo in Così fan Tutte at Teatro Real in Madrid, Falke in Die Fledermaus and Jupiter in Platée both at the Staatstheater Stuttgart, Elviro in Handel’s Serse at the Theater an der Wien and Zoroastre in Handel’s Orlando at Scottish Opera. With Les Arts Florissants he performed the role of Aeneas in Dido and Aeneas in New York and Moscow and at the festival in Aix-en-Provence he appeared as Nanni in Haydn’s L’Infedeltà delusa. He has already had the pleasure of working with conductors like William Christie, Andreas Spering, Jérémie Rhorer, Alessandro De Marchi, René Jacobs, Jean-Christophe Spinosi, Paul Goodwin and Marcus Creed. Personal details

Reviews

Die Einspielungen im Schuber sind auf höchstem Niveau musiziert und eine perfekte Möglichkeit, ins Wesen der Händelschen Musik einzusteigen ...
Michael Bender, Württembergische Blätter für Kichenmusik, Februar 2017

... das Collegium Cartusianum sowie der stets bemerkenswerte Kölner Kammerchor sind vorbildlich in der Gestaltung, die Spannung zwischen Intro- und Extrovertiertheit erklingt in bunter Folge.
Marcus Budwitius, opernlounge.de

Très vigilant dans l'articulation texte/ musique et orchestre/soliste, il [Peter Neumann] apporte un soutien efficace derrière ses solistes et son choeur [...].
[Peter Neumann] wacht sehr aufmerksam über die Artikulation von Text und Musik wie auch über das Orchester und die Solisten. Dadurch leistet er wirkungsvolle Unterstützung seiner Solisten und seines Chores [...]. Jérôme Angouillant, Clic Musique !, Oktober 2016

There is so much to enjoy with this Carus set and I’m sure with repeated listening more enjoyment will accrue.
Michael Cookson, musicweb-international.com, September 2016

Ein deutsches und fünf englische Oratorien von Georg Friedrich Händel umfasst eine ausgesprochen liebevoll gestaltete Box
APA, 07.06.2016

Was hier [Messiah] an Einfühlungsvermögen und Perfektion zu hören ist, rechtfertigt allein den Kauf der ganzen Box.
kulturradio.de, Bernhard Schrammek, 30.05.2016

Handel’s hugely successful oratorios made a lasting impression on English music and their continuing popularity is celebrated in this excellent collection.
Händels äußerst erfolgreiche Oratorien hinterließen einen bleibenden Eindruck in der englischen Musik und ihre andauernde Beliebtheit wird durch diese exzellente Kollektion zum Ausdruck gebracht
new-classics.co.uk

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