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              Sound 
              Samples & Downloads   | 
            Carl STAMITZ (1745-1801) 
               
              Viola Concerto No 1 in D [22:11]  
              Franz Anton HOFFMEISTER (1754-1812) 
               
              Viola Concerto in D [20:47] 
              Viola Concerto in B flat [20:55]  
                
              Victoria Chiang (viola)  
              Baltimore Chamber Orchestra/Markand Thakar 
              rec. 5-6, 18-19 May, 2009, Kraushaar Auditorium, Goucher College, 
              Towson, Maryland, USA  
                NAXOS 8.572162 [63:53]   
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                  The main attraction here will be the fact that, in the classical 
                  era, the viola was not a frequently-used solo instrument. Until 
                  the twentieth century and composers like Bartók, Walton, 
                  Hindemith, Pettersson and Bloch, the viola concerto repertoire 
                  is remarkably thin: two concertos by Franz Hoffmeister and a 
                  series by Carl, Anton and Johann Stamitz from the classical 
                  period, Berlioz’s Harold in Italy, a nearly-forgotten 
                  concerto for viola and clarinet by Max Bruch, and two large-scale 
                  virtuoso works by York Bowen and Cecil Forsyth, played by Lawrence 
                  Power on a fascinating Hyperion CD.  
                     
                  The concertos themselves are elegant classical creations, worthy 
                  examples of the era of Mozart and Haydn without ever really 
                  challenging the ears, or the supremacy of that duo. The solo 
                  instrument is the primary appeal: Stamitz and Hoffmeister clearly 
                  have an affection for the viola and an understanding of what 
                  it can do as a soloist. The stereotype of the viola as a sad 
                  instrument fit for mourning or bitter emotional episodes, the 
                  way it was typecast by composers as different as Walton and 
                  Brahms, is not at all in evidence here: all three concertos 
                  are in major keys and all three demonstrate the instrument to 
                  be a versatile and interesting star.  
                     
                  Hoffmeister is especially free with his soloist: the viola gets 
                  an extended solo in the adagio of the concerto in D, and in 
                  the B flat adagio sings nearly from start to finish a melody 
                  which weaves up and down across the registers. There are challenging 
                  double-stops and good tunes in every movement. Stamitz, on the 
                  other hand, adds resonant clarinets to the wind section and 
                  seems, especially in the first movement and its epic cadenza, 
                  to be working on a slightly bigger scale than Hoffmeister’s 
                  serenade-like works. Strikingly, the Stamitz slow movement briefly 
                  features the soloist in duet with the orchestral viola section. 
                   
                     
                  These are not period-instrument or particularly period-informed 
                  performances; they use tasteful vibrato and contemporary strings. 
                  The Baltimore Chamber Orchestra is up to all its demands, Markand 
                  Thakar is a steady hand at the helm, and Victoria Chiang, professor 
                  at Baltimore’s Peabody Conservatory, makes for a superb 
                  soloist, with no second thoughts about what technical demands 
                  there are and with the richness of tone necessary to really 
                  “sell” the viola as solo instrument.  
                     
                  For those who enjoy this - and those who listen no doubt will 
                  - more of the Stamitz family’s viola concertos are available 
                  on a Supraphon disc, and the Baltimore Chamber Orchestra, Thakar, 
                  and Chiang last year collaborated on an intriguing disc of concertante 
                  works by Ignaz Pleyel, who was very roughly a contemporary of 
                  Beethoven. The Pleyel album comes with a downloadable bonus 
                  track which extends the playing time to 90+ minutes, though 
                  if you acquire it as a download there’s no extra step. 
                  If you have either of those two discs, this is a logical next 
                  step, and a happy one too.  
                     
                  As a part of the Naxos Digital line, this album is currently 
                  only available for download at the website Classicsonline, where 
                  it sells for rather less than the price of a physical compact 
                  disc. Other download retailers, like eMusic and iTunes, stock 
                  it as well. Naxos informs me that a standard CD is schedules 
                  for July 2011.  
                     
                  Brian Reinhart   
                 
                  
                  
                 
                 
             
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