His main interest was to research German music of the 17th and 18th century and to revive the discovered works in performances and recordings, taking into account their position in historic and literary context.
Between 1995 and 2007 he served as a juror at the International Competition for harpsichord and Fortepiano at the Festival van Vlaanderen in Bruges.[1]
As a harpsichordist he recorded in 1995 concertos of Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach with Les Amis de Philippe, conducting from the instrument. The recording was nominated for the Cannes Classical Award 1997 and followed by a recording of three more concertos in 1997.[5] In 2004 he recorded Lieder of Georg Philipp Telemann with Klaus Mertens.[6]
As a conductor, he recorded in 1999 a collection of four church cantatas, Philipp Heinrich Erlebach's Gelobet sei der Herr täglich combined with two works by Georg Benda and one by Carl Friedrich Gessel, with the Michaelstein Telemann Chamber Orchestra.[7] The same year, he recorded in 1999 Telemann's oratorio Der Tod Jesu with soloists Dorothee Mields, Britta Schwarz, Jan Kobow, Klaus Mertens, the Magdeburger Kammerchor and the Telemann Chamber Orchestra.[8] The recording was awarded the Preis der Deutschen Schallplattenkritik in 2000.[5] In 2002 he recorded several cantatas for Pentecost of Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel, a prolific contemporary of Bach.[9] In 2004 he recorded Georg Gebel's Johannespassion with Dorothee Mields, Henning Voss, Jan Kobow, Klaus Mertens, Sebastian Bluth, the ensemble inCanto Weimar and the Weimar Baroque Ensembles.[5]
^Oper und Konzert aktuell (Opera and concert news of nmz, Neue Musik Zeitung) Meiningen: Festival Alter Musik in Thüringen "Güldener Herbst", 9 September 2005 (in German)