BERNHARD CRUSELL Three Quartets for clarinet and strings
GCD 920609
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Eric Hoeprich, clarinets
Members of the London Haydn Quartet: Catherine Manson, violin John Crockatt, viola Jonathan Manson, cello
Production details
Total playing time 68:03
Recorded at St Martin’s Church, East Woodhay, Hampshire, in November 2016 Engineered and produced by Philip Hobbs Booklet essay by Eric HoeprichEnglish – Français – Deutsch
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BERNHARD CRUSELL (1775-1838)Three Quartets for clarinet and strings
Quartet op. 7 in D major (1823) 01 Allegro non tanto 02 Un poco largo 03 Menuetto. Allegro & Trio04 Finale. Allegro
Quartet op. 4 in C minor (1816) 05 Allegro molto agitato 06 Menuetto & Trio 07 Pastorale. Un poco allegretto 08 Rondo. Allegro
Quartet op. 2 in E flat major (1812) 09 Poco adagio - Allegro 10 Romanze. Cantabile 11 Menuetto. Allegro & Trio 12 Rondo. Allegro vivace
About this album
Thanks to his exceptional talent as a clarinettist, the Finnish-born composer Bernard Henrik Crusell made it very quickly from his home village, Uusikaupunki, to the metropolis of Stockholm, where he spent the rest of his life, mainly as a member of the orchestra of the Swedish Royal Court. His travels brought him to Berlin, Dresden, Leipzig and Paris, cities in which he made the acquaintance of many great musicians and instrument builders. His works for the clarinet (including three concertos) were widely known in the musical circles of the first part of the 19th century.
Eric Hoeprich, principal clarinet of the Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century since its foundation, has specialized in performing on the historical clarinet, also being the owner of a large collection of 18th and 19th century instruments. On Glossa he has issued nearly a dozen of recordings, including the Mozart Clarinet Concerto directed by Frans Brüggen. His regular collaboration with the London Haydn Quartet lasts for many years now, with a referential recording of the Mozart and Brahms Quintets being an important highlight (Glossa, 2004).
On the new recording of the Crusell Quartets presented here, Hoeprich and the members of the London Haydn Quartet play on fine historical instruments, which provide a warm, blended sound that is at the same time both transparent and full of detail. All excellently captured by Philip Hobbs in St Martin’s Church in East Woodhay, England, and supplemented by an informative essay authored by Hoeprich himself.