diumenge, 11 de juny del 2023

VON CAMERLOHER, Placidus (1718-1782) - Missa Solemnis ex C

Paul Troger (1698-1762) - Allegorie auf die Unbefleckte Empfängnis Mariae (c.1733)


Placidus von Camerloher (1718-1782) - Missa Solemnis ex C
Performers: Bеatе Hаriadеs (soprano); Nicholаs Hаriadеs (alto); Sebаstian Schäfеr (tenor); Johаnnеs Bаyеr (bass); Frеisingеr Domchor; Dombеrg-Kammerorchester; Wolfgаng Kiеchlе (conductor)

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German composer. The fourth of eight children of Joannis and Maria Anna Camerloher, he was the younger brother of the Munich court composer Joseph Anton Camerloher and the elder brother of Johann Gregor Virgilius Camerloher (1720-1785), a cellist at the Munich court from 1747. After schooling in Murnau, he attended the Ritterakademie in Ettal (1730-39). He studied theology at the Wilhelmsgymnasium in Munich from 1739 to 1741 while also participating as a singer in Fastenmeditation performances for the Congregatio Latina BV Mariae; he later composed 17 Fastenmeditationen for the congregation (1748-73). In 1745 Johann Theodor, electoral bishop (later cardinal) of Freising, Regensburg and Liège, appointed Camerloher Kapellmeister to the Freising court; Camerloher was also his director of chamber music in Liège (1753-59). Through his patron’s influence, Camerloher received the necessary diploma of nobility to serve as prebendery and canon at the monasteries of St Veit (1748-53) and St Andreas (1753-82) in Freising, and he dedicated his symphonies op.1 to him. Johann Theodor’s death in 1763 brought an end not only to Camerloher’s travels (to Liège, Paris etc.) but also apparently to his symphonic output: as Kapellmeister under the next two bishops of Freising, he composed chiefly sacred works and school dramas. Symphonies and sacred works comprise the majority of Camerloher’s surviving music. 29 symphonies survive bearing his full name: three printed sets of six (opp.1, 2 and 4) and 11 manuscript symphonies (ten in D-Mbs, one in CH-E). Eight further symphonies can be assigned to him with some confidence (others formerly attributed to him are now believed to be by Joseph Anton Camerloher). The symphonies are mostly scored for strings alone, and all but one are in three movements. The earlier symphonies are short, but both the movements and the phrases of the later ones show a progressive increase in length. The thematic areas are quite clearly articulated, and those in later symphonies display characteristic features; the many antecedent–consequent sentences look forward to a later Classical style. Camerloher’s unquestionably authentic sacred works include nine masses, which are large-scale works employing strings, clarino trumpets, timpani, chorus and soloists. The orchestral writing is primarily homophonic in texture, as in Camerloher’s later symphonies, while more traditional elements, such as counterpoint and an occasional fugue, are reserved for the chorus.

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