Telemann Has a Lot to Tell

Telemann Has a Lot to Tell

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39 responses

Poor Telemann. Every year, if I write anything laudatory about him for his birthday anniversary, following as closely as it does on the heels of the March birthdays of his great colleagues and rivals, Handel (March 5) and Bach (March 21), it seems to bring the invective raining down upon him.

“He’s boring!” will write one.

“He’s a notespinner!” will opine another.

“How many times can you rewrite the same piece?” will grumble a third.

Could it be that he was a casualty of having done his job too well?

After all, Telemann wrote more music than Bach and Handel combined – over 3,000 works – making him one of the most prolific composers of all time. Yet nothing in his oeuvre has captured the public imagination quite like the “Brandenburg Concertos” or the “Water Music.”

Of course, Telemann wrote “Water Music” too. Keep in mind, this was not conceived for a king’s leisurely cruise down the Thames (à la Handel), but rather to celebrate the centennial of the Hamburg Admiralty. That’s a pretty dry commission.

The work opens with an Ouverture in C, perhaps suggestive of the movement of the water itself. Then Telemann begins to gussy it up with music representative of various mythological figures (Thetis asleep and awake, Neptune in love, Naiads at play, Triton the jokester, stormy Aeolus, and pleasant Zephir, comprising movements 2-8). The penultimate movement is a gigue inspired by the tides, and the work concludes with a suggestion of some jolly sailors.


No one is going to argue against the fact that Handel had the more indelible tunes. As a classical music broadcaster, I’ve had more experience with this suite than most, but I still can’t say I could pick it out of a police line-up.

Nevertheless, Telemann was a significant talent, who was recognized in his own lifetime. He was an innovator, assimilating Italian and French influences into his own style, and his contemporaries bought and studied his scores. He was offered the cantorate of the Thomaskirche in Leipzig, ahead of Bach. He counted Bach among his friends, as well as Handel. Bach even requested that he be the godfather of his son, Carl Philipp Emanuel.

Telemann lived an unusually long life (86 years), though it was not without its miseries. His first wife died young. His second ran up gambling debts in amounts larger than his annual income. Ultimately, his friends had to bail him out. As he grew older, he suffered further indignities, including failing eyesight.

Celebrated in his own day, by the 19th century he was dismissed as a “polygraph,” someone who had simply composed too much. In a sense, he was a victim of his own success.

Today, he inspires renewed enthusiasm among early music specialists, who have done much to restore his reputation. At the very least, he deserves a little love on his birthday.

Happy Birthday, Georg Philipp Telemann!*

——————

One of my favorite Telemann moments, the “Air à l’Italien” from the Suite in A Minor for Flute and Orchestra:


Always been partial to this one, too:

——————

*NOTE: By the Julian calendar, Telemann was born on March 14


Comments

39 responses to “Telemann Has a Lot to Tell”

  1. Anonymous

    I don’t know if it’s fact, but to me, Telemann basically created chamber music playing with his output. I think he is equally great to any other masters of the period. If I am right, then he is actually more important, on a level with Rameau in terms of influence.

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Zlat Zlat Bach and Handel wrote chamber music also, but yes, his “Paris” Quartets have given much pleasure over the years. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2qpI0CSh12M

  2. Anonymous

    Telemann opens today’s Philadelphia Bach Collective afternoon concert before Bach Cantata BWV 99.Media: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10227319411606114&set=p.10227319411606114&type=3

  3. Anonymous

    Telemann’s the bomb.

    1. Anonymous

      Tell it, mann.

  4. Anonymous

    I’ll take his enjoyable works anyday !

  5. Anonymous

    He was CPE’s Godfather. Prolly not considered a “rival.”

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Michael Schiano Also mentioned in the post

      1. Anonymous

        Classic Ross Amico True. I guess I was distracted by the rivalry.

      2. Classic Ross Amico

        Michael Schiano Words matter! Apologies if mine were carelessly chosen (as they sometime are).

      3. Anonymous

        Classic Ross Amico Not at all. My words were sloppy.

  6. Anonymous

    The problem of Telemann’s posthumous reputation is that he composed an overwhelming amount of excellent music. He had a difficult life. His first wife died; his second wife cheated on him repeatedly as well as amassing those huge gambling debts to which you allude above. Telemann himself had to pay off those debts because according to the law at the time, he was responsible for them (and he would have had to go to prison). They separated in 1736. He also gad to raise a grandson.

  7. Anonymous

    Absolutely love his G major Viola Concerto
    (which, curiously enough begins with a cello solo!)

    1. Anonymous

      Jim Barclay Jr O my god, I was going to post the same thing! The viola concerto stands forever as my happiest music ever. Whenever I hear it, I’m swept away with joy. I love Telemann and you all can have Bach and all his interminable chugga chugga chugga, stop…chugga chugga chugga, stop…chugga chugga chugga, etc. etc. etc

      1. Classic Ross Amico

        Jim Hall I share your chugga chugga assessment! For me, the less instruments Bach employs, with few exceptions, the more I like him. I can lose myself in contentment when listening to the unaccompanied sonatas for violin or cello, but I definitely have to be in the right mood for the orchestral suites. And the oratorios? Just kill me. I recognize that this is a limitation of mine and not the music. I enjoy Handel’s oratorios very much. Does that make me middlebrow? When’s the last time we heard any of Telemann’s oratorios?

      2. Anonymous

        Classic Ross Amico I do get swept away by the great Bach organ works, and since my daughter and a friend have played the double violin concerto in our living room, there is that, but it pretty much stops there. BTW, I have always considered Handel the greatest ever. Period.

      3. Classic Ross Amico

        Jim Hall The double violin concerto is wonderful.

    2. Anonymous

      😀

  8. Anonymous

    I love Telemann— If anyone calls him a notespinner, they might as well say that about JS Bach and Mozart. Here’s to Telemann!

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Claire Pula The Baroque era, when they churned out music by the yard. There was no time to sit around and be a lofty genius, when you needed a new cantata for Sunday’s service, or the king required some amusement for his barge procession down the Thames!

      1. Anonymous

        Not to mention any looming holydays or royal weddings or funerals or battle victories

  9. Anonymous

    As you know, Telemann (CPE Bach’s godfather and good friend of JS Bach) was the Thomaskirche’s first choice for the Kantor position but turned it down wanting to stay in Hamburg, opening the door for the position to go to Bach. What you may not know is that in the Scheide Library in Princeton is a letter from Bach to Telemann in which he writes an excited post script in the margin announcing the birth of a new son!

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Mark Laycock No! I did not know! So many treasures right here in my own back yard. Thanks!

  10. Anonymous

    Although I’m one of those people who credits Telemann with more or less inventing wallpaper music, I have to admit that he seems to have been a pretty nice guy. AIUI, he gave J.S. Bach a lot of help during the early part of Bach’s career, for example. Unlike Handel, who was “not at home” the two times that Bach stopped over for a visit.

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Richard Schultz I did not know that about Handel. It’s not for nothing that he was known as “The Great Bear.” Telemann’s “Tafelmusik” is the ultimate wallpaper. But just because it’s background music doesn’t mean it can’t be good! https://rossamico.com/2023/02/23/handel-the-great-bear-of-music/

  11. Anonymous

    So would you consider Telemann the Yin or the Yang to one hit wonders????

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Kenneth Hutchins Does he have a “hit?” I mean one work that stands out about all others that is widely recognized? Maybe that “Air à l’Italien” I posted. Or his “Tafelmusik,” at least in name. But I gather most people wouldn’t know his music from Adam. Sadly.

    2. Classic Ross Amico

      Kenneth Hutchins Does he have a “hit?” I mean one work that stands out above all others that is widely recognized? Maybe that “Air à l’Italien” I posted. Or his “Tafelmusik,” at least in name. But I gather most people wouldn’t know his music from Adam. Sadly.

  12. Anonymous

    Such an informative and well written post. I am going to drop my favorite Telemann movement and performance here for everybody who wishes to enjoy it. I have watched this Youtube video more than any other. https://youtu.be/qQ33_1OSve0?si=yYXk92OhmbI2Eq9P

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Jennifer Francis It’s beautiful, and in excellent sound. Put me in mind of Christmas before I even noticed the tree. Composers back then sure did love their pastorales. Thanks for sharing!

  13. Anonymous

    I don’t have a lot by Telemann in my collection, but what I have I enjoy as much as I do Bach or Handel. It’s a shame he’s not heard more – who appreciates what they haven’t heard?

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Joel Wagoner Exactly! Keep an open mind and try to be receptive. How many of Telemann’s 3,000 works ever get played? Of course, the same could be said for much less prolific composers. What we know is what’s allowed into the repertoire, the stuff that gets played over and over and over again, which is only a very small fraction of hundreds of years worth of music. I heard a symphony by Guy Ropartz today that I don’t believe I ever heard before. I have some of his stuff in my collection, but I’d never heard the Symphony No. 5. Should it be considered among the greatest symphonies ever written? Who cares? I enjoyed it. Then I listened to Beethoven’s “Diabelli Variations” for the first time in probably decades. Even among the output of the most revered composers, there’s music that for one reason or another we just don’t encounter. After the same, endlessly repeated, handful of “nickname” Beethoven piano sonatas, what a crazy adventure! Hardly unknown, but I can’t think of the last time I heard it.

  14. Anonymous

    I enjoy his music and play it often

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Alexandra Haynes-buob Keep fighting the good fight!

  15. Anonymous

    His Tafelmusik is outstanding

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Matthew Conroy High-quality (and, for the composer, lucrative) banquet music, for sure. Handel recognized a good tune when he heard it and “borrowed” a few of them from his friend, as with this concerto. What time does the Queen of Sheba arrive? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PSRNE-I4vZU&t

  16. Anonymous

    Telemann fan here. When I was in a recorder quartet we played lots of transcriptions of his stuff and I grew to love it. Go Telemann!

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Andrew Mendelsohn Welcome, Telemann fan! This was my first Telemann LP (from Nonesuch Records’ groovy cover art era):Media: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1807628923489496&set=p.1807628923489496&type=3

      1. Anonymous

        Classic Ross Amico the golden age of Nonesuch. I had that album and so many others.

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