The Leipzig Collegium Musicum, Vol. 1 - Music before Bach

Regular price $19.99
Label
PENTATONE
Release Date
July 31, 2026
Format
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    Featuring
    • COMPOSER
      Johann Beer, Johann Friedrich Fasch, Christoph Graupner, Johann Gottlieb Heinichen, Georg Melchior H
    • PERFORMER
      Neues Bachisches Collegium Musicum, Reinhard Goebel, Max Volbers, Clemens Roger
    Product Details
    • RELEASE DATE
      July 31, 2026
    • UPC
      8717306265928
    • CATALOG NUMBER
      PTC5187592
    • LABEL
      PENTATONE
    • NUMBER OF DISCS
      1
    • GENRE

The Neues Bachisches Collegium Musicum, under the direction of Reinhard Goebel and outstanding soloists such as Max Volbers on recorder and Clemens R�ger on horn, present the first instalment in the series The Leipzig Collegium Musicum, Vol. 1: Music before Bach, offering a vivid exploration of a formative musical world. The term Collegium Musicum refers to an assembly of musicians who gathered regularly, under direction, to study and perform vocal and instrumental works, an idea that flourished in many cities, yet found particular resonance in Leipzig. By the early 18th century, this landscape of competing ensembles and personalities stood on the threshold of transformation, as musical life gradually evolved towards the later institutional structures that would shape the city's enduring legacy. In practice, however, these societies existed within a complex and often unsettled environment, where overlapping groups, shifting roles, and competing interests made the musical scene difficult to define and reconstruct with certainty. This programme offers a glimpse into that dynamic and, at times, elusive world, where music was shaped as much by collaboration and exchange as by individual voices. The works presented reflect a period before Bach's arrival in Leipzig, when compositional language was still evolving and stylistic boundaries were fluid. Drawing on influences from across Europe while asserting their own character, these pieces reveal a rich interplay of invention, contrast, and expressive immediacy. Composers such as Georg Philipp Telemann, Johann Friedrich Fasch, and Georg Melchior Hoffmann were part of this environment, where musical ideas were shared, adapted, and developed through collective practice.