Sale!
Home / Records / Place Order Johann Ernst Prinz von Sachsen Weimar: Complete Violin ConcertosJ.S. Bach: Harpsichord Transcriptions

Place Order Johann Ernst Prinz von Sachsen Weimar: Complete Violin ConcertosJ.S. Bach: Harpsichord Transcriptions

Original price was: $18.99.Current price is: $9.49.

For orders under $39.00, a shipping fee of $12.99 applies.

SKU: SK0480205-US20260105-083122 Category: Tag:
Share

DISC: 1

1. Violin Concerto In E Major, Op. 1 No. 5: I. –
2. Violin Concerto In E Major, Op. 1 No. 5: II. Siciliana
3. Violin Concerto In E Major, Op. 1 No. 5: III. Allegro Assai
4. Violin Concerto In D Minor, Op. 1 No. 4: I. Adagio E Staccato – Presto – Adagio E Staccato – Presto – Adagio
5. Violin Concerto In D Minor, Op. 1 No. 4: II. Un Poco Allegro – Adagio
6. Violin Concerto In D Minor, Op. 1 No. 4: III. Vivace
7. Keyboard Concerto In D Minor, Bwv 987 (After Johann Ernst Prinz Von Sachsen-Weimar): I. [Grave – Presto – Grave] – Presto – Grav
8. Keyboard Concerto In D Minor, Bwv 987 (After Johann Ernst Prinz Von Sachsen-Weimar): II. Allegro – III. Adagio
9. Keyboard Concerto In D Minor, Bwv 987 (After Johann Ernst Prinz Von Sachsen-Weimar): IV. Vivace
10. Violin Concerto No. 7 In G Major: I. Adagio
11. Violin Concerto No. 7 In G Major: II. Allegro
12. Violin Concerto No. 7 In G Major: III. Adagio
13. Violin Concerto No. 7 In G Major: IV. Allegro
14. Violin Concerto In E Minor, Op. 1 No. 3: I. Vivace
15. Violin Concerto In E Minor, Op. 1 No. 3: II. Pastorella
16. Violin Concerto In E Minor, Op. 1 No. 3: III. Presto
17. Violin Concerto In B-Flat Major, Op. 1 No. 1: I. Allegro
18. Violin Concerto In B-Flat Major, Op. 1 No. 1: II. Adagio – Allegro
19. Violin Concerto In B-Flat Major, Op. 1 No. 1: III. Un Poco Presto
20. Keyboard Concerto In B-Flat Major, Bwv 982 (After Johann Ernst Prinz Von Sachsen-Weimar): I. [Allegro]
21. Keyboard Concerto In B-Flat Major, Bwv 982 (After Johann Ernst Prinz Von Sachsen-Weimar): II. Adagio – III. Allegro
22. Keyboard Concerto In B-Flat Major, Bwv 982 (After Johann Ernst Prinz Von Sachsen-Weimar): IV. Allegro
23. Violin Concerto In A Minor, Op. 1 No. 2: I. Allegro
24. Violin Concerto In A Minor, Op. 1 No. 2: II. Largo
25. Violin Concerto In A Minor, Op. 1 No. 2: III. Andnate
26. Violin Concerto No. 8 In G Major: I. Allegro Assai
27. Violin Concerto No. 8 In G Major: II. Adagio
28. Violin Concerto No. 8 In G Major: III. Presto E Staccato
29. Keyboard Concerto In G Major, Bwv 592a (After Johann Ernst Prinz Von Sachsen-Weimar): I. –
30. Keyboard Concerto In G Major, Bwv 592a (After Johann Ernst Prinz Von Sachsen-Weimar): II. Grave
31. Keyboard Concerto In G Major, Bwv 592a (After Johann Ernst Prinz Von Sachsen-Weimar): III. Presto
32. Violin Concerto In G Minor, Op. 1 No. 6: I. Vivace
33. Violin Concerto In G Minor, Op. 1 No. 6: II. Recitativo
34. Violin Concerto In G Minor, Op. 1 No. 6: III. Allegro

Powered by Broadtime Tuneportals

More Info:

Brilliant Baroque Concertos by a Young Prince Our ‘Thuringia Cantat’ series documents the diversity of music culture in this German region with exemplary compositions illustrating what is certainly a unique music history. On the present volume we remember and call attention to a musician and composer (on the occasion of what will soon be the three hundredth anniversary of his death) who died at any early age and hardly figures at all in today’s broad cultural memory: Prince Johann Ernst of Saxe-Weimar. His original and brilliant concertos are now being presented in complete form for the first time on CPO, complemented and contextualized by the harpsichord transcriptions of Johann Sebastian Bach based on these works. The project was designed and supervised musicological by Prof. Dr. Manfred Fechner from Jena, whom we also have to thank for the detailed, informative, and highly readable booklet text. Although Johann Ernst died at the age of eighteen after a severe illness, we have this highly gifted prince filled with youthful musical enthusiasm to thank for the substantial support lent to the instrumental concerto, which was still rather unknown in German territories at the beginning of the eighteenth century – this genre born in Italy would soon advance to the status of the epoch’s ‘guide musical form.’