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    Orchestre de chambre de Paris

    Giovanni Antonini | direction
    Benoît Grenet | cello 
    Adrien Ramon | trumpet

    The Orchestre de chambre de Paris and Giovanni Antonini travel to the heart of Viennese classicism.

    Photo de Giovanni Antonini © Marco Borggreve
    Giovanni Antonini © Marco Borggreve

    Berlin Sinfonia for five for cornet, strings and continuo
    Kraus  Symphony in C minor, VB 142
    Stamitz  Concerto for cello No. 3
    Mozart  Symphony No. 41 K. 551 « Jupiter » 

    Mozart’s Symphony No. 41, “Jupiter,” represents the radiant pinnacle of classical orchestration, which was developed by composers such as Berlin, Stamitz, and Kraus during the eighteenth century. While the stunning Sinfonia featuring cornett by German-Norwegian musician Johan Daniel Berlin (1714-1787) resonates with echoes of the late baroque, Carl Stamitz was part of the Mannheim school which was so crucial to the development of orchestral music. It paved the way for the classical style of Johann Martin Kraus and Mozart, two composers born in the same year. However, Jupiter also draws on Bach and Handel, whom Mozart had discovered a few years earlier. This fruitful dialogue between past and present reaches its apogee in the final movement, which is both a technical tour de force and a jubilant apotheosis. 

    Production Orchestre de chambre de Paris