
Have you noticed the growing trend of pianists taking up 17th-century keyboard works on the modern concert grand? Perhaps it has to do with the
Georg Muffat (1653-1704) is one of those composers who tends to get lost not because his music is inferior but because it appeared during and
When Georg Muffat was studying in Rome, his teacher Bernardo Pasquini introduced him to his colleague and collaborator Arcangelo Corelli. One evening after hearing a
Fans of the eccentric late-17th century composer Georg Muffat will delight in this premiere recording of his complete keyboard works, performed by Siegbert Rampe. One
Georg Muffat’s “Selected Instrumental Music mingling Seriousness and Pleasure” was published in Passau in 1701. The set contains 12 concerti grossi, half of which already
The six concerti grossi assembled on this disc come from Georg Muffat’s last published collection of secular concertos, dating from 1701. If you enjoy Corelli’s,
Part of Capriccio’s “Famous European Organs” series, this CD presents music from the Baroque and Classic periods, played with flair and sensitivity on the Riepp
Georg Muffat’s highly evocative suites and concertos are a concentrate of what (good) baroque music is all about: basic tunes developed with handy counterpoint, lively