Telemann played a key role in shaping musical professionalism, encouraging public performance and cultivated listening. Telemann’s Double Concerto for Two Horns and Orchestra in E-flat Major belongs to the third production of his Musique de Table ( Tafelmusik , 1733), one of the most ambitious and representative publishing ventures of his career. Far from serving merely as refined background entertainment, this “Table Music” was intended for attentive listening among cultivated audiences—a context that explains the high degree of formal craftsmanship and structural variety found throughout the collection. The concerto’s instrumentation is particularly noteworthy. Telemann designates the two solo instruments as tromba selvatica , a term that has long intrigued musicological research. It most likely refers not to the modern trumpet, but to an early natural brass instrument akin to the horn, without valves and limited in chromatic flexibility. This ambiguity reflects the fluidity of in...
A curated collection of writings on music, its creators, and the ideas behind it.