Audiophile Audition Review: If Haydn Had Written for Oboe 4 out of 5
Iโve come to appreciate the intriguing concept albums this label puts together, right down to the appealingly minimalist cover designs and maximalist booklets.
Until recently, Caro Mitis was a label known to me only by name. But Iโve come to appreciate the intriguing concept albums this label puts together, right down to the appealingly minimalist cover designs and maximalist booklets, with lots of tightly cropped photos of the performers running down the margins. While some record companies are scrimping today on design, Caro Mitis seems committed to going the whole hog, which wouldnโt be much of an enticement to sample unless the company had musically compelling fare to offer. And it does.
In the case of the disc under review, the concept is a kind of negative one: even the โifโ in the title is not entirely accurate because Haydn did write for oboe solo. Sort of. However, his one work spotlighting oboe, the Sinfonia Concertante, has that instrument sharing the stage with three other soloists. So the notes to the recording explain, โThe present disc is far from being the collection of Haydnโs works for oboe, but rather an endeavor of a talented oboe-performer (Alexei Utkin) in love with Haydnโs music to imagine how this composer could have written for the instrument.โ Thus we have, in addition to the Sinfonia, an early trio in which the original violin part has been transcribed for oboe dโamore and a spurious but pretty wonderful concerto for oboe and orchestra.
The notes to the recording have a good deal of interesting background information on the Sinfonia Concertante. Haydn was dragooned into writing it when the impresario Johann Salomon, who arranged the series of concerts that produced Haydnโs twelve London Symphonies, learned that a rival series called the Professional Concert was about to introduce a sinfonia concertante by Ignace Pleyel. Pleyel is one of those mostly forgotten composers who are now getting a new lease on life through recordings. But around 1800, as Haydnโs career was nearing its close, Pleyelโs was still on the ascent: he was widely considered the most important composer in Europe. Certainly by 1792, when the friendly rivalry between Haydn and Pleyel took place in England, he was considered significant enough to go head to head with the reigning European master. I say โfriendly rivalryโ because Pleyel, who was a former pupil of Haydnโs, managed to stay on good terms with the older composer throughout his life.
Whereas Pleyel was a virtual sinfonia concertante factory, turning out a number of these Baroque-inspired works for various combinations of instruments, Haydn produced only the one he wrote for the Salomon concerts. It has always gotten mixed reviews. When it was premiered, it was not the great hit that Haydnโs London symphonies were, and it is another of those almost forgotten pieces that got a reprieve through the recording studio. Today, though it is widely performed, it is still controversial. Some critics think it is as fine as Mozartโs famous works in the form; others think it is lesser Haydn at best. Iโve always been partial to the work, which makes its points very compellingly in a performance like the one from Utkin and the Hermitage Chamber Orchestra. By the looks of the photo in the booklet, this is a prevailingly young ensemble, and they play with the enthusiasm and spirit of youth, as well as a good deal of technical polish. Tempi are mostly faster than Iโve heard elsewhere, even from original-instrument bands such as the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment (Virgin). All to the good, I say. The work unfolds excitingly in the Hermitageโs performance.
One curious feature of the performance, however, is the inclusion of the harpsichord. Iโve never heard the work played with this old-fashioned continuo instrument in place, and Iโm stumped as to why itโs here. Now, some recordings of the London Symphonies have included harpsichord continuo, probably taking their cue from the keyboard obbligato in the finale of Symphony 98. Here, harpsichordist Haydn and violinist Salomon got to show off their talents for the delectation of the first London audiences. But most critics dismiss the inclusion of the harpsichord in late Haydn as a silly anachronism. In the current performance of the Sinfonia, I donโt find this inclusion obtrusive or quaint. It works for me, but then Iโm not doctrinaire about the whole continuo issue. You can judge for yourself.
The Divertimento, a work from the early years of Haydnโs employment at the Esterhรกzy palace, is a charming interlude between the major works on the disc. Since it isnโt widely known in its original incarnation for violin, cello, and harpsichord, I donโt see how there can be any objections to Utkinโs transcription for oboe dโamore. As the notes explain, the main pitch of the oboe dโamore is A major, the key the work is written inโfurther justification, if any is needed beyond the lovely playing of three performers.
That leaves the Oboe Concerto, a work attributed to Haydn because his name appears on the original manuscript. This is probably a ploy to capitalize on the composerโs fame. It is decidedly not by Haydn, though itโs still recorded under his name. Caveat emptor. Actually, Haydnโs work or not, itโs a strong piece, with a lively, fetching last movement that combines elements of variations form with a rondo. This is very, very good music whoever wrote it. Again, Utkin is in excellent form, as is the orchestra, all captured in nicely detailed, atmospheric sound.
As with other Caro Mitis recordings, Iโm grabbed by the cover art, a drawing of a gentleman and lady out for a stroll by 18th-century Scottish artist John Kay. It couldnโt be more appropriate.
Lee Passarella
- Source
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.