Bamert

Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - François-Joseph Gossec: Symphonies (1998)

Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - François-Joseph Gossec: Symphonies (1998)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 322 Mb | Total time: 66:56 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Chandos | # CHAN 9661 | Recorded: 1997

This disc of five symphonies by François-Joseph Gossec (1734-1829) is part of Chandos' Contemporaries of Mozart series. As he was born two years after Haydn and died two years before Schubert, he was also a contemporary of Beethoven as well as many other composers of the Classical and early Romantic periods. Like Haydn, Gossec lead a successful career in music that included composing, performing, teaching and various directorship positions throughout France. (Yes kids, you can make money in music, no matter what your parents say!) As would be expected, Gossec was highly prolific, producing no fewer than thirty works for the stage, a large body of choral and chamber music, and over fifty symphonies.
Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - Antonio Salieri: Symphonies, Overtures & Variations (2001)

Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - Antonio Salieri: Symphonies, Overtures & Variations (2001)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 299 Mb | Total time: 65:41 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Chandos | # CHAN 9877 | Recorded: 2000

The highlight of this sunny, consistently delightful disc comes in the form of 26 Variations on "La folia di Spagna", based on one of the most famous tunes in Western civilization. A veritable "concerto for orchestra", this late (1815) masterpiece offers a compendium of orchestral tricks of the trade, with brilliant sectional writing, echo effects, and solos for everyone, including (alongside more traditional strings and winds) trombones, harp, and even snare drum. Why it's not an orchestral staple even today simply defies the imagination, and aside from a less-than-seductive principal violin solo, it's brilliantly played here.
Matthias Bamert, London Philharmonic Orchestra - Hubert Parry: Invocation to Music (1992)

Matthias Bamert, London Philharmonic Orchestra - Hubert Parry: Invocation to Music (1992)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 269 Mb | Total time: 55:01 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Chandos | # CHAN 9025 | Recorded: 1991

Chandos's brave and important Parry series, conducted with sterling musicianship and remarkable insights by Matthias Bamert, adds another choral disc to the four out of the five symphonies so far issued. Recently The Soul's Ransom and The Lotos Eaters were released (1/92) and now comes the large-scale, nearly hour-long cantata Invocation to Music, a ten-movement setting of a poem by Parry's friend Robert Bridges and composed ''in honour of Henry Purcell'' for the bicentenary, in 1895, of his death. The first performance was at the Leeds Festival that year. How many have there been since then?
Matthias Bamert, London Philharmonic Orchestra - Charles Hubert Hastings Parry: Symphonies Nos. 3 & 4 (1990)

Matthias Bamert, London Philharmonic Orchestra - Charles Hubert Hastings Parry: Symphonies Nos. 3 & 4 (1990)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 353 Mb | Total time: 76:16 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Chandos | # CHAN 8896 | Recorded: 1990

The Parry revival gathers pace. This is the first disc in a Chandos series which is to embrace the five symphonies and some of the choral works, including the rare and lovely The Lotus Eaters. A special significance attaches to it because the conductor is not British. Who would have expected a Swiss conductor, Matthias Bamert, to explore such a rare English preserve as the Parry symphonies? It is an encouraging act of faith, and the quality of the performances and interpretations is such as springs not from duty but from conviction and enthusiasm. Chandos give the music one of their clear and faithful recordings, with admirable balance and slight resonance.
Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - Johann Christian Cannabich: Symphonies (2020)

Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - Johann Christian Cannabich: Symphonies (2006)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 308 Mb | Total time: 66:49 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Chandos | CHAN 10379 | Recorded: 2005

Matthias Bamert’s survey of music by Mozart’s contemporaries continues with this elegant programme of Cannabich Symphonies. Harmonically conservative, lavishly scored, and full of the mannerist crescendi and rising figures the Mannheim Orchestra was famous for, these are fascinating examples of the style gallant. Though Cannabich had found his way to sonata form in the G major symphony, something of Telemann’s programmatic writing hangs over the Symphony in A major, while baroque affects are yet more keenly felt in the D major Symphony. The London Mozart Players’ pristine sound and careful phrasing is highly enjoyable throughout.
Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - Josef Mysliveček: Symphonies (2004)

Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - Josef Mysliveček: Symphonies (2004)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 272 Mb | Total time: 60:27 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Chandos | CHAN 10203 | Recorded: 2003

Matthias Bamert and the LMP have dusted off some treats in their 'Contemporaries of Mozart' series for Chandos. This latest release, featuring premiere recordings of six symphonies by the Bohemian-born Josef Myslivecek, is one of the best. None of these works, dating back to the 1770s is much more than 10 minutes long, yet each is delightfully imaginative, and benefitting from the LMP's sprightly playing.
Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - Adalbert Gyrowetz: Symphonies (2000)

Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - Adalbert Gyrowetz: Symphonies (2000)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 310 Mb | Total time: 64:13 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Chandos | CHAN 9791 | Recorded: 1998

I was only a talented man who can be happy if he conquers the present; only a genius lives beyond the grave, wrote Adalbert Gyrowetz in 1850, and history has borne him out. Gyrowetz (1763-1850) was yet another of the 18th century’s prolific (more than 30 operas, 40 symphonies, and a large body of chamber music, songs, and sacred works) and talented composers who earned their daily bread by turning out what were very interesting, pleasing, but ultimately time-bound works. The symphonies on the present disc are all believed to have been written around or before 1790. The first two, Op. 6 Nos. 2 & 3, are typical classical symphonies that follow the standard fast-slow-fast-fast pattern.
Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - Franz Anton Hoffmeister: Symphonies (2005)

Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - Franz Anton Hoffmeister: Symphonies (2005)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 285 Mb | Total time: 61:43 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Chandos | CHAN 10351 | Recorded: 2005

Bamert’s lively direction and the highly professional playing of the London Mozart Players provide Herschel with the best imaginable advocacy, and we may be grateful to Chandos for giving us the chance to hear his music.
Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - Johann Baptist Vanhal: Symphonies (1998)

Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - Johann Baptist Vanhal: Symphonies (1998)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 290 Mb | Total time: 60:35 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Chandos | CHAN 9607 | Recorded: 1997

The G minor Symphony, the second of Vanhal’s symphonies in that key, is an absolute delight, full of good ideas The C minor Symphony (1770) is also a work of originality Matthias Bamert and the London Mozart Players give an excellent account of themselves, and are recorded with clarity and warmth.
Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - Muzio Clementi: Symphonies (1993)

Matthias Bamert, London Mozart Players - Muzio Clementi: Symphonies (1993)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 264 Mb | Total time: 58:55 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Chandos | CHAN 9234 | Recorded: 1992

Our Contemporaries of Mozart series with Matthias Bamert for Chandos counts over 20 CDs to date and is still on-going. The series has uncovered a wealth of previously unavailable eighteenth-century works and its success is illustrated by the numerous accolades bestowed upon it including a number of releases credited with Editor’s Choice in Gramophone. Composers featured include those more well-known from the era, such as Clementi, Salieri and Stamitz to the rarely-heard Gossec, Vanhal and Gyrowetz.