|
EXPLORE
Musicweb - CLICK
------------------
Message Board
Announcements
Twitter @MusicWebINt
------------------
RECORDING
OF THE MONTH
Shostakovich Symphony 8
RCO, Nelsons

HALLÉ WALKURE
4+1CDs £22 post free
RECORDING
OF THE MONTH

Complete Orchestral Works

EMI Complete Ferrier

Storyteller

Mahler
Symphony 7
Bamberger Symphoniker
Jonathan Nott
................
RECORDING OF THE MONTH

Simone Young
RECORDING OF THE MONTH
Italia Nicola Benedetti

Only complete set
on the Market
35CDs £67

RECORDING
OF THE MONTH
Momentous!
BARGAIN
OF THE MONTH

Italian Cello Concertos
and Sonatas
3CDS £10.95

Brahms Symphonies Zinman
£26.85
RECORDING
OF THE MONTH
Beethoven Symphonies
Thielmann


Magic Moments of Opera
10 Operas Arthaus £95

Brilliant Classics 40CDs

Brilliant Classics 60CDs

9 Symphonies Chailly
£31.90

9
Symphonies C Davis
£18.70
BARGAIN
OF THE MONTH
Absolutely marvellous!
£5.99 post free

Bruch VC1 Gluzman
Quite the finest performance of the Bruch concerto
I have ever heard.

The best opera DVD of the year so far [ST]

Mahler Song Cycles
Katarina Karnéus
Available
again
The Raga Guide
4CDs + 196 page book
£33 post-free world-wide
15,000 copies sold
Editorial
Board
Classical Editor
Rob Barnett
Seen & Heard
Editor Emeritus
Bill Kenny
Editor in Chief
Stan Metzger
MusicWeb Webmaster
Len Mullenger
Assistant Webmaster
David Barker
|
 |
 |
|

Buy
through MusicWeb from £12.00
postage
paid.
Musicweb
Purchase button
|
Wolfgang
Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791)
Serenade in C minor K388 (c.1720) [22:42]
Leoš
JANÁČEK (1854-1928)
Mládí (1924) [18:14]
Werner PIRCHNER
(1940-2001)
Streichquartett für Bläserquintett
PWV 15 (1974) [11:54]
QuintettWien; Reinhold Brunner (bass clarinet)
(Mládí)
rec. 29 May–1 June 2006, Wiener Konzerthaus
NIMBUS NI 5812 [52:53]
|
|
This is an engaging
and well produced program of wind music
both familiar and less common. Mozart’s
Serenade K388 is of course a
popular work, and deservedly so. The
unusual minor key gives the work a greater
sense of depth than most of the other
serenades, and although the ‘dark and
sombre’ description I‘ve read elsewhere
goes perhaps a bit far, there is certainly
plenty of drama and tension in the opening
Allegro. The instruments are
quite closely recorded, but this takes
nothing away from the pleasant atmosphere
of that most elegant of Andante movements,
and the voicing of the canon in the
Menuetto provides the utmost
in warmth and clarity. Of the other
versions of this piece I suspect the
Orpheus Chamber Orchestra on DG Galleria
would be many people’s choice, but with
wind playing like this I feel no need
to start casting around for comparisons.
I
know Janáček’s Mládí,
or ‘Youth’, from a recording by the
Prague Wind Quintet on Supraphon, coupled
with both of his string quartets played
by the Talich Quartet. In general the
quintett.wien are a little broader and
slightly less urgent sounding than the
Prague players, and the Czech wind sound
does have that more characterful acidic
sound East-European, and more texture-laden
vibrato than the Viennese group. This
may have been more like the qualities
which the composer had in mind, but
the quintett.wien has the edge in refinement
and accuracy in intonation, so it’s
a case of swings and roundabouts. I
have certainly been enjoying this new
recording a great deal, and it holds
plenty of that mix of surprising energy
and nostalgic melancholy for which we
love this music. I’ll keep the Prague
version for that wonderful Czech French
horn sound, but have great admiration
for the results in this version.
Werner Pirchner may
be a less familiar name to many, but
some may have discovered his satirical
wit and inventiveness on an ECM double
CD release from 1986 called ‘EU’. The
title, Streichquartett für Bläserquintett,
is a typical prod against pomposity,
but also has its origins in the original
version of some of the music, composed
for a film about the Tyrol, and using
a Tyrolean slave song to create a number
of variations. The later wind quintet
version adds a few more movements, and
on this recording the horn player Martin
Bramböck opens the work with a
sung version of this song, the text
being included in the booklet notes.
The Vienna Wind Soloists on ECM are
more fun than quintet.wien, swinging
out with plenty of gusto in the pseudo-waltzes,
the horn and bassoon reveling in raucousness
and farty noises wherever possible.
Despite all this larking around, their
playing in the final chorale is also
more moving than the quintett.wien.
All this said, I am glad to see Pirchner’s
name being aired once again, and listeners
need not fear that they are getting
a sub-standard performance on this new
disc. quintett.wien have great fun with
the score as well, and the allusion
to Malcolm Arnold in John Quinn’s booklet
notes is apt indeed, although there
are also some moments which put me in
mind of a kind of mad Aaron Copland.
I used to live near
Monmouth, and it is good to see my former
local record company Nimbus back on
its feet again. With solidly excellent
recordings like this we can hope for
a great deal more in the future. This
is one of the best wind quintet recordings
I have heard for a long time: close
and intensely detailed, but with plenty
of air and space around the musicians
as well, it is absolute demonstration
quality stuff.
Dominy Clements
|
|
Advertising
Rates
Visitor
stats
MusicWeb
International
has over 40,000 Classical CD reviews on offer
Discs
received
Having a problem
Donating?

Gerard
Hoffnung Concerts &
The
Bricklayer Story
New
Releases

New
Releases




MusicWeb
sells the Polish
catalogue CDAccord
£10.50 post free W-W

MusicWeb sells the
Arcodiva catalogue
£12.00 post free W-W

£11.75
post-free world-
wide
MusicWeb
can now offer
you discs from the following catalogues:
Prices include postage
Musicweb
Special
Offers
Monthly
Best Buys
Google
Ads - for information about privacy matters, click here.
Amazon Musicweb International is a participant in the Amazon
EU Associates Programme, an affiliate advertising programme designed to provide
a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.co.uk
and Amazon.com
|