Reviews

2011–2012 Series: “Opus 10” Festival: two weekends of musical tens

Tempesta di Mare is celebrating the end of a full decade of Baroque music-making with a ploy worthy of the Baroque functionaries who planned court entertainments built around clever fancies: Tempesta is conducting a three-concert, two-weekend festival in which all the pieces have a ten in their pedigrees. The first two concerts, presented Saturday night and Sunday afternoon in Center City, focused on chamber music and solo sonatas. Overall, the two programs demonstrated that the Baroque repertoire is so rich and varied that you can put together two meaty, entertaining concerts even when you limit your selections with a gimmicky rule invented for a special occasion.

CD: “Fasch Orchestral Works, Volume 2”

…uniformly excellent, with precise intonation, energetic tempi, and virtuosic performances “Johann Friedrich Fasch is one of the most ignored yet most interesting composers of the late Baroque. This disc presents premiere recordings by Philadelphia’s baroque orchestra of four delightful works in three genres: two concerti, an ouverture, and a sinfonia. The disc is accompanied by […]

2011–2012 Series: “Leipzig Shortlist: Telemann, Fasch, Graupner or Bach”

…exemplary technical mastery, interpretive integrity and stylish panache “As it has done over the decade of its life, Tempesta di Mare performed a program [Leipzig Shortlist] that not only proved an historical point but that also proffered a series of musical delights. Fasch’s Concerto for Lute in D minor, Telemann’s Quatour VI in E minor, […]

2011–2012 Series: “Tempesta Turns Ten: fanfares, suites and a birthday symphony”

…period instruments concert on Hill the best ever “Tempesta di Mare, Philadelphia Baroque Orchestra, opened its 10th anniversary season with a concert Sunday afternoon in the Presbyterian Church of Chestnut Hill. The program of music composed by Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Johann Friedrich Fasch, William Boyce, Antonio Vivaldi and Jean-Philippe Rameau drew an enthusiastic crowd […]

On the Road: “Roman Nights” at the 2011 Indianapolis Early Festival

Four Stars “The second of the six Early Music Festival programs featured only two composers: George Frideric Handel and Alessandro Scarlatti, more than sufficient to give us a sustained evening of high-quality Baroque music, both played and sung. Especially when presented by a Philadelphia group called Tempesta di Mare, which impressed more than the Rebel […]

Philly Region: Bach Trio Sonatas on the 2011 Philadelphia Bach Festival

“Rearranging the master 

— The second concert [in the Festival] provided another example of the scholarship, musical imagination, and performing skill that supports the best early music performances. Gwyn Roberts and Richard Stone, directors of Tempesta di Mare, took six of Bach’s trio sonatas for organ and arranged them for different combinations of winds, strings, harpsichord […]

2010–2011 Series: “Telemann’s Ino — plus premieres by Fasch and Janitsch”

“The Saturday performance at Presbyterian Church of Chestnut Hill was recorded live

—the latest in Tempesta di Mare’s relationship with the Chandos label—and was worth preserving. The group, expanded to 25 or so musicians, was more than well-rehearsed; it had internalized the music. The performance revealed [Telemann’s Ino] narrative with admirable specificity and maintained a crackling energy […]