When the Akademie für alte Musik Berlin first assembled in 1982, the group was among only a small group in Germany, and perhaps the first in the former East Germany. Now they've got lots of competition, but they've stuck with the virtues that made them famous and have continued to maintain their preeminent status. Those virtues include a characteristic silvery (or, in the case of Handel, perhaps, watery) tone, a subtle lyricism, and most of all precise ensemble honed by the fact that, well ahead for their time, the group ...
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When the Akademie für alte Musik Berlin first assembled in 1982, the group was among only a small group in Germany, and perhaps the first in the former East Germany. Now they've got lots of competition, but they've stuck with the virtues that made them famous and have continued to maintain their preeminent status. Those virtues include a characteristic silvery (or, in the case of Handel, perhaps, watery) tone, a subtle lyricism, and most of all precise ensemble honed by the fact that, well ahead for their time, the group has no conductor, only a rotating concertmaster, in this case, Bernhard Forck. The players really listen to each other, and the music is constantly revealing, and revealing in a lively way, small contrapuntal details. That's all to the good in this collection of concerti grossi of Handel, the first of a set. These aren't the most familiar Handel instrumental works, but any lover of the Water Music should enjoy them. In the older Corellian four- or five-movement form, they wear the...
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