Recordings
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Baroque Christmas Music
CDH55048
Helios (Hyperion's budget label)
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Details
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Movement 1: Ouverture
Movement 2: Marche
Movement 3: Plainte
Movement 4: Gavotte
Movement 5: Passepied: Rundtanz
Movement 6: Gigue
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The grandly posturing ‘French’ Introduction enfolds a light dancing section in 3/8 metre that avoids the customary fugal writing to be found in the most typical fast sections of such movements. There follows an energetic Marche and Plainte whose nature seems more to provide contrast than to lament some great tragedy. The central section of the next movement, Gavotte, is entitled Gavotte Il en Musette, and it is here that Telemann suggests the French bagpipe, or musette: a sighing melody with piquant pauses, the whole over a drone bass. The instrument known as the musette was immensely popular during Louis XIV’s reign to depict rustic and pastoral scenes and, by association therefore, the watching shepherds of the Nativity. A Passepied and double (i.e. variation, in this instance for solo violin) follows, and the Festliche Suite closes with a Gigue in 6/4 time.
from notes by Robert Dearling © 1999