Georg Philipp Telemann portrait

Georg Philipp Telemann (1681–1676) played the flute (among several other instruments), which explains his understanding of the capabilities of the instrument and his ability to write so idiomatically for it.

Flute players regard the Fantasias as some of the best music ever written for solo flute.

What is a fantasia?

Telemann uses the term in the sense described by J.G. Walther in his Musical Lexicon (1732):

in a Fantasia ‘one plays what one wills, or composes to please oneself’.

There was a rich tradition of keyboard, lute and guitar fantasias, improvised or improvisatory music, going back to the sixteenth century.

The flute fantasias continue the tradition of free flights of fancy combined with strict contrapuntal (fugal) writing. Each is in a different key and has a different format. However they all do have a similar overall loose structure: one or more opening movements followed by a dance movement.

The opening movement(s) tend to be more serious and the concluding dance movements are lighter in character (see below).


Telemann’s Fantasia for Flute in B minor

This fantasia has a two-part structure.

In the first part you will hear alternating slow (largo — broad) and fast (vivace — jaunty) sections.

  • The vivace sections use free fugato writing: that is, the main theme is repeated a number of times in different related keys.
  • Each statement of the theme is followed by attractive passages that have the flute playing both a melody and an accompanying bass line through the use of many large leaps.
  • This compound-line technique is found throughout the fantasias and is one of the many technical challenges the flute player has to face.

In the second part you will hear a French-style gigue (allegro — cheerful).

  • This light and playful movement also uses the compound-line technique and suits the flute beautifully.

Watch and listen => YouTube Video (4 minutes)


Newman College Chapel, Melbourne University

© Greg Dikmans