MOZART & BRAHMS Clarinet Quintets
London Haydn Quartet Eric Hoeprich
GCD 920607
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Performing artists
Production details
Playing time: 71'31Recorded at St Martin's Church, East Woodhay, Hampshire (England), in September 2004Engineered by Niek Wijns & Guido Tichelmans Executive producer: Carlos CésterBooklet essay by Eric HoeprichDesign 00:03:00 oficina tresminutosBooklet in English - Français - Deutsch - Español
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WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART (1756-1791)
Clarinet Quintet in A major, KV 581 01 Allegro 02 Larghetto 03 Menuetto 04 Allegretto con variazioni
JOHANNES BRAHMS (1833-1897)
Clarinet Quintet in B minor, opus 115 05 Allegro06 Adagio07 Andantino - Presto non assai08 Con moto
About this CD
These clarinet quintets by Mozart and Brahms represent two pinnacles, not only in the repertoire for the clarinet, but also in the genre of chamber music. Written late in the lives of both composers, they embody the maturity, depth, experience and possibly even a premonition of an other-worldliness soon to be experienced firsthand. It is significant that both works were inspired by particular clarinet players - Anton Stadler for Mozart and Richard Mühlfeld for Brahms. Both were known as outstanding musicians who also had a predilection for slightly unusual instruments. Stadler had worked together with the instrument maker Theodor Lotz to develop the basset clarinet, an instrument with an extended low range. And Mühlfeld played on slightly out-of-date Bärmann-system clarinets by Georg Ottensteiner, made of boxwood, at a time where most players were using blackwood instruments and a more advanced mechanism. The clarinets used for this recording reflect the differences inherent in instruments separated by roughly a hundred years. Both are unusual and highly specialized. These boxwood clarinets, together with period string instruments set up with gut strings and played with period bows, create a sound world quite unlike that heard with today's modern clarinets and strings. The possibilities for articulation, dynamics and phrasing, as well as the blend and colourful sound world of the instruments, bring out expressive qualities in the music that might otherwise be more difficult, or perhaps even impossible, to reach.
Eric Hoeprich returns to Glossa on splendid form with two pillars of the chamber music repertory in the Clarinet Quintets of Mozart and Brahms. For this release – recorded in the tranquil English surroundings of St Martin’s Church, East Woodhay in Hampshire, Hoeprich is joined by the recently-established and much-lauded London Haydn Quartet. [read more...]