LUIGI BOCCHERINI Six Quatuors G259
La Real Cámara Arthur SchoonderwoerdEmilio MorenoAntonio ClaresMercedes Ruiz
GCD 920312
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La Real CámaraArthur Schoonderwoerd, fortepianoEmilio Moreno, violinAntonio Clares, violaMercedes Ruiz, violoncello
Production details
Total playing time: 70:53 Recorded in Girona (Auditori), Spain, in January 2011 Engineered by Davide Corsato and Matteo Costa Produced by Matteo CostaDesign: Valentín Iglesias Booklet essay: Emilio MorenoEnglish - Français - Deutsch - Español
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LUIGI BOCCHERINI (1743-1805) Six Quatours pour le clavecin ou pianoforte, violon, viola et basse obligé (G259)
Quartetto Iº [B flat major] 01 Allegro moderato02 Minuetto con moto
Quartetto IIº [G minor] 03 Larghetto 04 Minuetto
Quartetto IIIº [E flat major] 05 Allegro vivace 06 Minuetto
Quartetto IVº [A major] 07 Larghetto08 Minuetto con moto
Quartetto Vº [F major] 09 Allegretto 10 Minuetto allegro
Quartetto VIº [F minor] 11 Andante appassionato ma non lento 12 Minuetto
About this CD
As a guide to the music of Luigi Boccherini written in Spain there is no one better today than Emilio Moreno; this string player, director and scholar knows in a profound way how music composed across the map of 18th century Europe can live and breathe. For a new Glossa release Moreno is once again focusing on an important aspect of Boccherini’s output from the more than 35 years he spent working within that late 18th century Spanish mixture of a severe tradition, a vibrant popular culture and an openness to culture trends coursing throughout the Europe of Haydn and Mozart.
Joined by the talent of Dutch keyboard player Arthur Schoonderwoerd, Moreno leads La Real Cámara (with regular partners violist Antonio Clares and cellist Mercedes Ruiz) in six piano quartets transcribed from Boccherini’s Op 26 two-movement quartettini of 1778, and published some years later. Moreno takes us back to the Age of Enlightenment, to the cultured court of the Infante Don Luis de Borbón (the brother of the Spanish king) in Arenas de San Pedro - a royal residence outside Madrid but also near Ávila, and clearly within the scope of the European postal service - and to those substantial demands for chamber music of all configurations which the Font family quartet and Boccherini (a noted cellist himself) were adept at performing with technical assurance and artistry. Here, fortepiano joins violin, viola and basse obligé coming together in elegant, witty and graceful chamber music, in scores touched by those popular Spanish motifs cheerfully incorporated by Boccherini.