Tempesta di Mare / The Philadelphia Baroque Orchestra performs baroque music on baroque instruments with what the Philadelphia City Paper describes as "zest and virtuosity that transcends style and instrumentation." Led by directors Gwyn Roberts and Richard Stone with concertmaster Emlyn Ngai, Tempesta's repertoire ranges from staged opera with full orchestra to chamber music. The group performs all orchestral repertoire without a conductor, as was the practice when this music was new. Tempesta di Mare is named for baroque master Antonio Vivaldi's concerto meaning "storm at sea," a title reflecting music's power to evoke drama. Please subscribe and thank you for watching!
Shared 8 months ago
523 views
Shared 9 months ago
172 views
Shared 9 months ago
347 views
Shared 1 year ago
392 views
Shared 4 years ago
2.7K views
Shared 4 years ago
596 views
Shared 4 years ago
695 views
Shared 4 years ago
2.3K views
Shared 5 years ago
385 views
Shared 6 years ago
1.2K views
Shared 6 years ago
587 views
Shared 6 years ago
955 views
Shared 6 years ago
2K views
Shared 7 years ago
2K views
Shared 7 years ago
3.4K views
Shared 7 years ago
2.2K views
Shared 7 years ago
900 views
Shared 7 years ago
903 views
Shared 7 years ago
1.3K views
Shared 7 years ago
3K views
Shared 7 years ago
1.7K views
Shared 7 years ago
2.1K views
Shared 7 years ago
723 views
Shared 7 years ago
657 views
Shared 7 years ago
1.9K views
Shared 7 years ago
657 views
Shared 10 years ago
1.1K views
Shared 10 years ago
1.3K views
Shared 10 years ago
540 views
Shared 10 years ago
957 views
Georg Philipp Telemann - Concerto in E Minor for Flute and Violin, TWV 52:e3 IV, V; Tempesta di Mare
Shared 10 years ago
1.7K views
Shared 10 years ago
247 views
Shared 10 years ago
379 views
Shared 10 years ago
544 views
Shared 10 years ago
675 views
Shared 10 years ago
20K views
Shared 10 years ago
15K views
Shared 10 years ago
12K views
Shared 10 years ago
2K views
Shared 11 years ago
16K views
Shared 11 years ago
12K views