The Golden Age of the Horn

‘This album is designed as a tribute to the Golden Age of the Horn – the extraordinary time in the classical period that celebrated extreme virtuosity on the instrument, unmatched before or since. The two solo hornists are playing some of the most difficult pieces composed for the instrument, works which are rarely performed in live concerts due to the very high tessitura required. The challenging Concerto for Two Horns by Franz Anton Hoffmeister is receiving its world premiere recording on this album.’

JoAnn Falletta, Conductor


The Golden Age of the Horn
Concertos for Two Horns
HOFFMEISTER • L. MOZART • POKORNÝ • WITT

Jacek Muzyk, Horn primo • Daniel Kerdelewicz, Horn secondo
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra
JoAnn Falletta

The 18th century established the horn as a solo instrument, with virtuoso players commissioning concertos throughout Europe. The technical demands required to play hand-stopped instruments meant that many such concertos have not surfaced until recently. An exact contemporary of Beethoven, Friedrich Witt makes athletic use of the horn’s range in his Concerto in F major, which is also a feature of the cat-and-mouse interplay in Hoffmeister’s Concerto No. 3 in E flat. Expressive lyricism is present in such works as Leopold Mozart’s elegant and refined Concerto for Two Horns in E flat major, while the graceful Larghetto in Pokorný’s Concerto for Two Horns in F major is framed by two exuberant outer movements.

Listen to an extract from Pokorný’s Concerto for Two Horns in F major:
III. Finale: Presto assai
About the Artists

Following his studies in the United States, French horn player Jacek Muzyk returned to his native Poland where he worked with orchestras that included Sinfonia Varsovia and the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra. In 2002 he returned to the United States, where he played with the Houston Grand Opera and Dallas Symphony Orchestra before being appointed principal horn of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra. Jacek has made guest appearances with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and served as principal horn with the Los Angeles Philharmonic.

French horn player Daniel Kerdelewicz was born and studied in Poland where he performed variously with the Representative Band of the Polish Armed Forces, NFM Wrocław Philharmonic and the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra; he also premiered Wojtek Blecharz’s Concerto for Horn, Saxophone and Orchestra. In 2009, he was invited to join the Buffalo Philharmonic as acting associate principal horn by JoAnn Falletta, the position being confirmed the following year. Daniel has toured with the Boston Symphony, Boston Pops and Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestras.

Multiple GRAMMY-winning conductor JoAnn Falletta serves as music director of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra and music director laureate of the Virginia Symphony Orchestra. She has guest conducted many of the most prominent orchestras in America, Canada, Europe, Asia and South America. As music director of the Buffalo Philharmonic, Falletta became the first woman to lead a major American ensemble. She is the recipient of many of the most prestigious conducting awards and was named Performance Today’s Classical Woman of the Year 2019 and one of the 50 Great Conductors of all time by Gramophone magazine.

The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra (BPO) is Buffalo’s leading cultural ambassador, presenting more than 120 classics, pops and youth concerts each year. Since 1940, the orchestra’s permanent home has been Kleinhans Music Hall. In 2022, it made its 25th appearance at Carnegie Hall, celebrating the life and works of former BPO music director Lukas Foss. During the tenure of JoAnn Falletta as music director, the orchestra has rekindled its distinguished history of radio broadcasts and recordings, including more than 60 albums on the Naxos and Beau Fleuve Records labels.

More new concerto albums released this month

East German Flute Concertos
KOCHAN • NÄTHER • MATTHUS

Claudia Stein, Flute
Brandenburgisches Staatsorchester Frankfurt
David Robert Coleman

The three concertante works for flute and orchestra on this album are by composers who lived and worked in East Germany during the four decades of its existence. Günter Kochan, best known for his symphonic compositions, wrote an admired Concertino in 1964 that fuses succinctness with neo-Classical influence. Inspired by soloist Claudia Stein, Gisbert Näther’s Concerto from 2007 is characterised by teasing, fugitive gestures of a stylistically and technically diverse yet coherent nature. Composed in 1978, Siegfried Matthus’s Concerto is a striking example of his mature idiom in its use of serial elements and sonic innovations in the course of what proves to be an eventful and ever-changing relationship between soloist and orchestra.

Listen to an extract from Günter Kochan’s Flute Concertino:
I. Lento, poco rubato

There are fruitful contrasts in the works for piano and orchestra of these two French composers. Gabriel Fauré’s Ballade in F sharp major is graceful and serene but ends with a Lisztian flourish, whereas his neglected Fantaisie, though modestly orchestrated, is distinctive and characterful. Francis Poulenc, himself a gifted pianist, wrote his Piano Concerto for the Boston Symphony during his second American tour in 1949, full of alluring melodies and seductive orchestral colour. The ballet Aubade was composed for piano and 18 instruments with a scenario by Poulenc himself. It foreshadows the concerto while also revealing a Stravinskian influence.

Listen to an extract from Poulenc’s Piano Concerto:
III. Rondeau à la française

The brilliant dynamism of Italian Baroque music is at its most virtuosic and thrilling in works featuring the solo trumpet, whether in original compositions or transcriptions. Albinoni’s astonishing ornamentations and the luminous dexterity of Vivaldi’s concerto both represent each composer’s distinctive character, heard alongside works by Corelli, Grossi, Zipoli, Baldassare and Torelli. Domenico Sarri’s Sinfonia a 5 is heard here in its world premiere recording. Thomas Reiner is an acknowledged exponent of this repertoire with his performance of German Baroque Trumpet Concertos (Naxos 8.551419) described as ‘first rate and spirited … an excellent protagonist’ by Fanfare magazine.

Listen to an extract from Baldassare’s Trumpet Sonata No. 1 in F major (arr.)


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