Label: Challenge Classics
Format: SACD
Barcode: 0608917273328
Catalog number: CC 72733
Releasedate: 06-05-16
Format: SACD
Barcode: 0608917273328
Catalog number: CC 72733
Releasedate: 06-05-16
- a rare disc of beautiful music devoted to bassoon and contrabassoon
- Simon van Holen, contrabassoonist of Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, is a world-beater for sheer virtuosity and singing ability
- accompaniment by RCO members: this is a stunningly and maybe unexpectedly enjoyable disc
- Simon van Holen, contrabassoonist of Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, is a world-beater for sheer virtuosity and singing ability
- accompaniment by RCO members: this is a stunningly and maybe unexpectedly enjoyable disc
Bassoon and contrabassoon; a kaleidoscopic rainbow of virtuosity, concentrated into a single CD. Perhaps there’s nothing unique here, but nevertheless it is something quite special and unusual the instrument had to wait until the twentieth century to really find its feet, amidst what was a wide-ranging exploration of new sonorities.
Even following the instrument’s wave of emancipation last century, the very first composition ever published for solo contrabassoon, the Baßnachtigall (1922) by Erwin Schulhoff (1894-1942), is still something of a rarity. Baßnachtigall sounds serious and droll at the same time, even occasionally fleet of foot, and with a tendency to virtuosity. The BACH motif and a Fugue leave us in no doubt that the classically trained Schulhoff was fully aware of what he was up to.
It takes the merest whiff of the frivolous elegance in Mozart’s Sonata KV 292 to be enchanted by what Mozart allows the bassoon to achieve, within a limited instrumental range – to sing. Mozart’s ability to make instruments sing is in fact unparalleled by any other composer.
Jean Françaix (1912-1997): lightness and humour best typify the bulk of the composer’s output: the music of Françaix is a manifestation of French ‘joie de vivre’. The Divertissement for bassoon and string quintet (1942) is a telling example of this. Lively, whimsical, waspish and brimming with rhythmic subtleties, the piece demands extreme virtuosic precision from its performers. The Quartet op. 46 no. 1 (1804) by Franz Krommer (1759-1831) – a gallant and dashing work with, as was customary, a contrasting touch of melancholy in its Andante, is permeated by the same divertimento ambience.
As a writer of chamber music, symphonic works and work for the musical theatre, Kees Olthuis (1940) may be more familiar with the bassoon and contrabassoon than almost any other composer. He would describe his own musical language as ‘extended tonal’. In his Concertino for contrabassoon and string quintet (2014) he combines this with a lyrical, drama-inspired narrative skill.
Even following the instrument’s wave of emancipation last century, the very first composition ever published for solo contrabassoon, the Baßnachtigall (1922) by Erwin Schulhoff (1894-1942), is still something of a rarity. Baßnachtigall sounds serious and droll at the same time, even occasionally fleet of foot, and with a tendency to virtuosity. The BACH motif and a Fugue leave us in no doubt that the classically trained Schulhoff was fully aware of what he was up to.
It takes the merest whiff of the frivolous elegance in Mozart’s Sonata KV 292 to be enchanted by what Mozart allows the bassoon to achieve, within a limited instrumental range – to sing. Mozart’s ability to make instruments sing is in fact unparalleled by any other composer.
Jean Françaix (1912-1997): lightness and humour best typify the bulk of the composer’s output: the music of Françaix is a manifestation of French ‘joie de vivre’. The Divertissement for bassoon and string quintet (1942) is a telling example of this. Lively, whimsical, waspish and brimming with rhythmic subtleties, the piece demands extreme virtuosic precision from its performers. The Quartet op. 46 no. 1 (1804) by Franz Krommer (1759-1831) – a gallant and dashing work with, as was customary, a contrasting touch of melancholy in its Andante, is permeated by the same divertimento ambience.
As a writer of chamber music, symphonic works and work for the musical theatre, Kees Olthuis (1940) may be more familiar with the bassoon and contrabassoon than almost any other composer. He would describe his own musical language as ‘extended tonal’. In his Concertino for contrabassoon and string quintet (2014) he combines this with a lyrical, drama-inspired narrative skill.
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1Divertissement for bassoon and string quintetVivace02:24
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2Divertissement for bassoon and string quintetLento02:44
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3Divertissement for bassoon and string quintetVivo assai02:05
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4Divertissement for bassoon and string quintetAllegro02:26
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5Baßnachtigall for contrabassoon solo op. 38Melancolia02:25
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6Baßnachtigall for contrabassoon solo op. 38Perpetuum Mobile00:49
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7Baßnachtigall for contrabassoon solo op. 38Fuga01:21
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8Sonata for bassoon and cello KV292Allegro05:22
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9Sonata for bassoon and cello KV292Andante04:19
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10Sonata for bassoon and cello KV292Rondo-Allegro03:20
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11Quartet for bassoon, 2 violas and cello op. 46 no. 1Allegro08:42
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12Quartet for bassoon, 2 violas and cello op. 46 no. 1Andante05:02
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13Quartet for bassoon, 2 violas and cello op. 46 no. 1Menuetto. Moderato-Trio04:04
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14Quartet for bassoon, 2 violas and cello op. 46 no. 1Rondo03:36
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15Concertino for contrabassoon and string quintetConcertino for contrabassoon and string quintet19:33