Akademie Der Götter

Joshard Daus, Capriccio Basel, Zelter-Ensemble der Sing-Akademie zu Berlin - Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach: Johannes-Passion (2004)

Joshard Daus, Barockorchester Capriccio Basel, Zelter-Ensemble der Sing-Akademie zu Berlin - Carl Philipp Emmanuel Bach: Johannes-Passion (2004)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 455 Mb | Total time: 39:29+47:29 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Capriccio | # C60103 | Recorded: 2003

This is an important document, not least because what is actually captured on these discs is the first performance of this work since 1772. The score is presently housed in the archive of the Berlin Sing-Akademie after its discovery in the Ukraine. C.P.E.’s version of the Christ story is a dynamic one, with plenty of drama and much interaction between the various soloists and the chorus - a chorus that represents the Jews as well as performing the chorales.
Christina Landshamer, Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin & Bernhard Forck - Telemann: Ino & Late Works (2024) [24/48]

Christina Landshamer, Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin & Bernhard Forck - Telemann: Ino & Late Works (2024)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/48 kHz | Front Cover & Digital Booklet | Time - 71:06 minutes | 740 MB
Classical, Vocal | Label: Pentatone, Official Digital Download

The Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin and soprano Christina Landshamer present a Telemann monography, consisting of his cantata Ino and instrumental works composed in the same period. Despite, or perhaps actually thanks to, Telemann’s use of just one singer, Ino is highly dramatic, depicting a desperate woman trying to save herself and her son from her husband turned mad, eventually throwing herself off a cliff and then transformed into a goddess. Telemann composed it two years before his death, and the score is exceptionally rich and colourful. The cantata is combined with his Overture in D Major, Divertimento in E-flat Major and Sinfonia melodica, each underlining the exceptional liveliness of this composer well into the ninth decade of his prolific life.
Christina Landshamer, Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin & Bernhard Forck - Telemann: Ino & Late Works (2024)

Christina Landshamer, Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin & Bernhard Forck - Telemann: Ino & Late Works (2024)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 354 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 168 Mb | Digital booklet | 01:11:06
Classical, Vocal | Label: Pentatone

The Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin and soprano Christina Landshamer present a Telemann monography, consisting of his cantata Ino and instrumental works composed in the same period. Despite, or perhaps actually thanks to, Telemann’s use of just one singer, Ino is highly dramatic, depicting a desperate woman trying to save herself and her son from her husband turned mad, eventually throwing herself off a cliff and then transformed into a goddess. Telemann composed it two years before his death, and the score is exceptionally rich and colourful. The cantata is combined with his Overture in D Major, Divertimento in E-flat Major and Sinfonia melodica, each underlining the exceptional liveliness of this composer well into the ninth decade of his prolific life.
René Jacobs, Akademie für Alte Musik - Telemann: Orpheus (1998)

René Jacobs, Akademie für Alte Musik - Telemann: Orpheus (1998)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 674 Mb | Total time: 2h39'24'' | Scans included
Classical | Label: Harmonia Mundi | # HMC 901618.19 | Recorded: 1997

In this premiere recording, René Jacobs leads a cast of outstanding singers and musicians in a grand production of Georg Philipp Telemann's 'Orpheus.' The manuscripts of this operatic drama were only recently rediscovered and because of some missing material, the version presented here cleverly interpolates other music by Telemann (and his contemporaries) to complete the story.
René Jacobs, Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin - Reinhard Keiser: Croesus (2000)

René Jacobs, Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin - Reinhard Keiser: Croesus (2000)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 818 Mb | Total time: 62:36+59:41+60:53 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Harmonia Mundi | # HMC 901714.16 | Recorded: 1999

Is another baroque opera–in this case by composer Reinhard Keiser (1674-1739)–really worth hearing in its entirety? After a completely conventional overture, the opening scene pits the legendarily rich king of Lydia, the titular Croesus (who incidentally lived in the fifth century B.C.), against the Athenian philosopher and lawgiver Solon. On account of his immeasurable wealth, the complacent Croesus believes himself to be completely secure and unassailable; Solon mocks his riches and points out how ephemeral all earthly goods are. This exchange of words via recitative is perfectly built up–both as a composition and as performed here. From his very first notes, Roman Trekel's Croesus carries conviction, while Kwangchul Youn (a role originally intended for tenor but justifiably and effectively transcribed by conductor René Jacobs for bass) is no less impressive.
Harmonia Mundi - Opéra Baroque - Deutschland: Keiser, Telemann, Graun [9cd] (2013)

Harmonia Mundi - Opéra Baroque - Deutschland: Keiser, Telemann, Graun [9cd] (2013)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 2,67 Gb | Total time: 611:51 | Digital booklet (PDF)
Classical | Label: Harmonia Mundi | # HMX2908658.99 | Recorded: 1995, 1996, 2000, 2004

This luxurious set containing 39 CDs, 3 DVDs, 1 CD-Rom and four detailed booklets will tell you the full story of Baroque opera in Italy, France, England, and Germany. No fewer than 17 complete operas (including two on DVD) and two supplementary CDs (the dawn of opera, Overtures for the Hamburg Opera) provide the most comprehensive overview of the genre ever attempted! The finest performers are assembled here under the direction of René Jacobs and William Christie to offer you 47 hours of music. An opportunity to discover or to hear again the masterpieces of Baroque opera, some of which have been unavailable on CD for many years.
Ton Koopman, Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir - C.P.E. Bach: Matthäus-Passion 1769 (2002)

Ton Koopman, Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra & Choir - C.P.E. Bach: Matthäus-Passion 1769 (2002)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 308 Mb | Total time: 101:57 | Scans included
Classical | Label: ORF | # ORF CD 316 | Recorded: 2001

Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, as part of his regular duties as kapellmeister in Hamburg, composed 19 passion settings, alternating the four Gospel texts so that a new setting of a given text appeared once every four years, as his predecessor Georg Philipp Telemann had done. Until the discovery of the Berlin Sing-Akademie collection in Kiev in 1999, all that remained of this considerable body of work were bits and fragments of individual pieces, most of them extant because they were used in other contexts.