Trumpet

Trumpeter To Release Album Featuring His Private Collection Of Trumpets

On his new album “The Trumpets of Matthias Höfs” trumpeter Matthias Höfs gives an insight into his private trumpet collection. In the course of his career he has not only collected a large number of modern trumpets, but also historical models which he even partly reconstructed himself. “The gigantic variety of trumpet instruments has always fascinated me,” says Höfs. “There is hardly any other instrument that is so versatile in sound and expression combined with this enormous dynamic range and possibilities”. In cooperation with the Bremen wind instrument manufacturer Thein Brass, a treasure chest of over 30 different instruments has been collected over the years, which Matthias Höfs opens for this album. Meanwhile he plays exclusively on the trumpets he helped develop. “We are constantly trying to improve the intonation and trick the physics in the process, to test the sound characteristics of the most diverse materials and alloys and to make the instruments even easier to play. Every time it is like Christmas for me, when the instrument is then freshly shining and ready for the first concerts. For me it is a great luck to have these possibilities. When composers are interested in it and compose for special instruments, it’s fantastic!”

The beginnings of the album as well as Höfs’ history of the trumpet lie in the Baroque period and in Handel’s most famous trumpet aria “The Trumpet Shall Sound”. Despite the few natural tones of the baroque trumpet, Handel creates a harmonious musical statement. Matthias Höfs shines with a rare keyed trumpet in Haydn’s Trumpet Concerto, in which the composer plays interestingly with the louder natural and the soft keyed tones, especially in the 2nd movement. Höfs demonstrates the special features of the cornet in an arrangement of Glazunov’s Albumblatt (1899), and with his colleagues from German Brass, with whom he has toured the world for decades, he lets the Aida trumpet shine in Verdi’s Triumphal March. Also with German Brass, he performs the arrangement of the 2nd movement of Marcello’s Oboe Concert on the so-called piccolo valve trumpet in high Bb/A, whose agility invites you to embellish the melodies. The unique combination of harp and descant horn and later in the piece piccolo trumpet is presented in Matthias Höfs’ arrangement of “Pavane pour une infante défunte”, in which Ravel’s sound conception is transferred into a miniature.

With three works of the 20th-century Höfs enters the here and now: Skalkottas’ Concertino for trumpet and piano and André Jolivet’s Concertino for trumpet, piano and strings make full use of the possibilities of modern trumpets. Sections with march-like formulas, triplet tongues, delicate lyricism, and gripping ascents to the highest heights – a compendium of all the technical elements necessary to master the instrument. Wolf Kerschek’s “Poem for Matthias” for flugelhorn, jazz trio, and string quartet, whose calm melodic arcs, enriched by expressive jazz elements, bring out the soft elements of the flugelhorn, form the conclusion of this exciting album.

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Jeremy Smith

Jeremy E. Smith is the Founder and Editor of Last Row Music. He received music degrees from Grace College, Carnegie Mellon University, and The Ohio State University. Currently, Jeremy is the bass trombonist of the Mansfield Symphony Orchestra and performs throughout Ohio, where he lives with his wife and two sons. Smith is a member of the International Trombone Association and the Jazz Journalists Association.