Handel: Music for the Royal
Fireworks; Concerti a Due Cori Nos. 1-3. Zefiro conducted by Alfredo
Bernardini. Arcana. $18.99.
Haydn: Horn Concertos Nos. 1 and
2; Michael Haydn: Horn Concerto; Mozart: Horn Concerto in E-flat (reconstructed).
Felix Klieser, horn; Württemburgisches
Kammerorchester Heilbronn conducted by Ruben Gazarian. Berlin Classics. $18.99.
Vivaldi: La Stravaganza—12
Concertos, Op. 4. Federico Guglielmo, violin and conducting L’Arte
dell’Arco. Brilliant Classics. $11.99 (2 CDs).
Vivaldi: Concerto in C for Two
Trumpets and Orchestra, RV 537; Concerto in C for Organ, Violin, Cello and
Orchestra, RV 554a; Sonata in C for Oboe, Violin, Organ and Chalumeau, RV 779;
Arias from “Motezuma,” “Il Teuzzone,” “Tito Manlio,” “Catone in Utica,”
“Scanderbeg” and “La Fida Ninfa.” Gabriele Cassone and Matteo Frigé, natural trumpets; Francesca
Cassinari, soprano; Marta Fumagalli, mezzo-soprano; Roberto Balconi, alto;
Mauro Borgioni, bass; Ensemble Pian & Forte conducted by Francesco Fanna.
Dynamic. $19.99.
Splendid playing is a
particular joy of all these releases, with the brass especially full and
resonant in Zefiro’s performance of Handel’s Music for the Royal Fireworks and three wind concerti (whose music
is drawn mainly from the composer’s oratorio choruses – Handel was an
inveterate and very adept re-purposer). These performances date to 2006 but
sound as fresh as can be, with very quick tempos in the faster movements,
sensitive phrasing in the slower sections, close attention paid to Baroque
style, and overall enthusiasm that comes through delightfully in all four of
the suites. There have been more grandiose recordings of Music for the Royal Fireworks, which was, after all, intended as an
outdoor display piece and features accessible themes and a celebratory style;
but Anthony Bernardini and Zefiro excel in the musicianly way they approach the
music, refusing to regard it as an 18th-century potboiler, even
though that is in some ways what it is. The brass is so good in Music for the Royal Fireworks, so
resonant and so full-sounding, that it tends to steal the show from the other
instruments – as indeed occurs in the second and third wind concertos as well
(the first omits the four horns that are present in the others). One example
among many: the fifth movement of the third wind concerto, which is based on Ode for the Birthday of Queen Anne and
the 1732 version of Esther, offers
delightfully scurrying strings with horn passages that resound in triumph above
them to excellent effect. This Arcana CD contains well-known music, but the
performances’ level of detail and expressiveness make the pieces sound fresh,
and the especially fine brass lends an air of splendor to the whole disc.
The brass playing is also
first-rate, albeit without any claim to authenticity of instrumentation, on a
new Berlin Classics CD featuring Felix Klieser, who was born without arms and
plays the French horn with his feet, using remarkable breath control to achieve
the effects that other horn players manage by hand-stopping their instruments.
Klieser’s extraordinary story is not the point of this disc of music by Joseph
and Michael Haydn and Mozart, although Klieser’s accomplishments inevitably
underlie the whole production. What matters here is the music, which Klieser
plays with remarkable sensitivity, fine phrasing, excellent cadenzas, and truly
astonishing breath control. Haydn’s Concerto No. 1 – the only horn concerto
known for sure to be by him – is stately and measured here in its first two
movements, with a particularly fine trill in the second movement’s cadenza, and
is then outgoing and bright in its finale. Concerto No. 2, which stylistically
appears to be an earlier work than No. 1 whether or not Haydn wrote it, gets an
equally sensitive and carefully wrought performance; and although Klieser plays
a modern horn, the Württemburgisches
Kammerorchester Heilbronn under Ruben Gazarian backs him up with apt attention
to period style. Klieser and Gazarian also make a high-quality team for the
other, less-known works here. Michael Haydn’s concerto, sometimes called a
concertino, may have originated as part of a now-lost serenade, which would
account for the unusual movement sequence of slow-fast-minuet. The music is
more stylized and more Baroque in feeling than that of Michael’s older brother,
constructed with elegance and the sort of formal balance that characterizes
much of Michael’s still-underrated music. Klieser’s horn is if anything a touch
too prominent here, thoroughly overshadowing the strings and continuo, but the
playing itself is top-notch, with fine pacing, phrasing and rhythmic vitality.
Also here is a reconstructed two-movement horn concerto by Mozart, cobbled
together from two movements with the catalogue numbers K370a and K371. The
movements appear to date to 1781, making them earlier than any of the four
extant complete concertos (the earliest, No. 2, dates to 1783). The music is
certainly Mozart’s, and even if the piece is by its nature fragmentary, it is
good to hear something new, or rather rediscovered, in Mozart’s horn
production. Here too Klieser plays with care and sensitivity and is well backed
up by Gazarian and the ensemble. Because this is a CD rather than a DVD,
Klieser’s appearance and performing method never become distractions from the
music, and that is what Klieser himself wants: he has said he simply wants to
be known as a musician, and on the basis of this recording, he is certainly a
very fine one.
Brass is absent in the
latest Brilliant Classics release featuring outstanding Baroque violinist
Federico Guglielmo, but virtuosity certainly is not, and here it is coupled
with meticulous attention to period style and a willingness to rethink
compositions that appear formulaic at first glance but that Guglielmo shows to
have considerable individuality. Guglielmo and his ensemble, L’Arte dell’Arco,
previously released a splendid L’Estro
Armonico, Vivaldi’s Op. 3, and now complement it with La Stravaganza, Op. 4. Despite the title, these 12 concertos are
something less than extravagant, and in fact are formally less forward-looking
than Op. 3. But they contain some harmonic experimentation that is interesting,
including an instance of enharmonic modulation in No. 7 that is well ahead of
Vivaldi’s time. As with L’Estro Armonico,
Guglielmo presents the concertos – seven in major keys and five in minor – in
an order that appears arbitrary, although he does explain that the works on the
first CD (Nos. 1, 11, 9, 4, 7 and 2) have a stronger ensemble focus, while
those on the second disc (Nos. 12, 8, 5, 10, 6 and 3) are more strongly
soloistic. This is a matter of degree, however, and most listeners will likely
notice no significant differences in the structure of these concertos or their
handling of the solo violin. What they will notice, however, is the strength
and forthrightness with which Guglielmo plays the music, as well as the very
unusual sound of his Mantuan instrument, built by Tommaso Balestrieri around
1760 and having a number of quirks and downright peculiarities. This is an
instrument that sounds notably different in different ranges, a reality with
which Guglielmo works carefully in order to showcase the differing sound of the
various Op. 4 concertos and, indeed, of the individual movements within them. There
is something exhilarating in Guglielmo’s handling of Vivaldi, whom he refuses
to deem a fusty composer of formula-based concertos but instead regards as an
innovative, clever and instrumentally highly adept creator of music whose
individuation Guglielmo seems determined to bring out at every opportunity. The
result is a La Stravaganza that is,
if not extravagant, intelligent, musically refined and wholly successful.
Vivaldi did write for brass,
although not to anywhere near the extent he wrote for strings – he was, after
all, himself a violinist of considerable skill. A fascinatingly variegated CD
on the Dynamic label gives a more-varied and more-nuanced portrait of Vivaldi
as a composer than listeners usually encounter. Considerable thought obviously
went into the assembly of this program featuring the exceptionally fine period
group Ensemble Pian & Forte under the direction of Francesco Fanna. The two
concertos and sonata here are all in C major, but the featured instruments vary
very widely and Vivaldi’s writing for them differs dramatically from piece to
piece. The two-trumpet concerto is especially attractive, doubly so because it
is here played on the natural trumpets for which it was written, not on the later
keyed trumpet – whose sound is very different, much more even and smooth and
much more able to cut through an accompanying ensemble, but for those reasons
much less distinctive and much less colorful. The concerto for organ, violin
and cello is a rarity, showcasing three separate instruments, each of which is
given a chance to display virtuosity within the compass of its capabilities.
And the sonata, which includes the bright sound of the oboe with the deep voice
of the chalumeau (predecessor of the clarinet, whose lowest register is still
called chalumeau), attractively combines the woodwinds with violin and organ
for a highly unusual sound. The vocal excerpts pale somewhat in comparison,
even though they too often include trumpets. However, hearing any of Vivaldi’s
operatic music is an unusual experience: only about 20 scores of his operas
survive, some of them in fragmentary form, although he claimed to have written
94 (a matter made more confusing by the then-common practice of retitling works
and reusing material from one work in another or several others). All Vivaldi’s
known operas are essentially in opera
seria form, which means the recitatives carry the plot along while the
arias are used to express characters’ reactions to events and emotional responses
to each other and to what is happening. The seven arias here, from six operas
(there are two from Tito Manlio), are
not especially distinctive, but all show off Vivaldi’s vocal-writing abilities
and provide the soloists, especially soprano Francesca Cassinari (who sings
four of the pieces), with opportunities to showcase their vocal range and
control. The absence of texts for the arias is unfortunate: the expressions of
these characters may be formal and formulaic, but knowing the words would help
listeners distinguish between arias using the trumpet to underline a
character’s martial prowess and ones using it to indicate the character’s anger
(two common reasons for including the trumpet in this context in Vivaldi’s
era). Even without the texts, this is a very unusual Vivaldi disc, showing
sides of the composer not often encountered and rounding out the portrait of Il Prete
Rosso to show him as far
more wide-ranging in capabilities and compositional skills than he is sometimes
considered to be by people who know him only through his violin concertos.
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