Tomaso Giovanni Albinoni (1671 - 1751) Oboe Concerti, Op. 7, Nos. 2, 3, 8 & 9, and Op. 9, No.6 String Concerto, Op. 7, No.1 Sinfonia in G major The...
Tomaso Giovanni Albinoni (1671 - 1751)
Oboe Concerti, Op. 7, Nos. 2, 3, 8 & 9, and Op. 9, No.6
String Concerto, Op. 7, No.1
Sinfonia in G major
The oboe, perfected in France around the middle of the
seventeenth century, gained acceptance in Venice during the 1690s. The first known
Venetian operas to include a part for it dated from 1692, and by 1696 at the latest it had
been heard at the Basilica of San Marco, which two years later recruited its first
permanent player of the oboe. Several other oboists of note established themselves in the
city, and the four ospedali
grandi, the charitable institutions caring for foundlings, orphans and the
destitute, added the instrument to the teaching curriculum.
It was logical, given Italy's - and, indeed, Venice's
- pioneering rôle in the development of the concerto, that sooner or later the first
concerti with parts for oboes would be written. The big question was how, if at all,
should they differ in style and form from violin concerti? For Vivaldi, as for most
Italian composers, the problem was easily resolved. In his hands the oboe becomes a kind
of ersatz violin. To be sure, he takes care not to exceed the normal compass of the
instrument (running from the D above Middle C to the D two octaves higher), remembers to
insert pauses for breathing and avoids over-abrupt changes of register, but the solo part
still seems remarkably violinistic - as Vivaldi himself tacitly acknowledged when, on more
than one occasion, he prescribed the violin as an alternative to the oboe.
It was left to Vivaldi's important Venetian contemporary,
Tomaso Albinoni, to find another way of treating the oboe in a concerto. Apart from being
a capable violinist, Albinoni was a singing teacher married to an operatic diva. His
experience of writing operas and cantatas decisively affected the way in which he
approached melody and instrumentation. His concerti equate the oboe not with a violin but
with the human voice in an aria. Conjunct movement and small intervals are generally
preferred to wide skips. In opening orchestral passages the oboe does not double the first
violin (as in Vivaldi concerti) but bides its time until its solo entry or else supplies
an independent line. The opening solo idea is often presented twice - the first time
abortively, the second time with a normal continuation. This twofold presentation is a
device borrowed straight from the operatic aria of the time.
Albinoni describes these works as concerti 'with' rather than
'for' oboe. The difference is significant. Whereas in a Vivaldi oboe concerto the prime
aim is to show off the capability of the soloist, here the oboe is the partner rather than
the dominator of the first violin - and even the second violin is not excluded from the
discourse. The spirit of give and take that exists between the treble instruments lends
these works a character that reminds one of chamber music.
Albinoni's first set of Concerti
a cinque with parts for one or two oboes, published in Amsterdam as his Opus 7 in 1715, has the distinction of being the
first such collection by an Italian composer ever published. The composer dedicated them
to a local nobleman and amateur musician, Giovanni Donato Correggio. The works are divided
into four groups, each of which begins with a concerto for strings (one of these, No.11,
contains passages for a solo violin), continues with a concerto for two oboes and finishes
with one for a single oboe. Whereas the concerti with one oboe are fully mature in
conception, those with two oboes are more varied, as if Albinoni, in 1715, had not yet
decided how to structure them. Certainly, the two-oboe works, which are all in the
traditional trumpet keys of C major and D major, carry strong traces of the trumpet
sonatas that Bolognese composers, in particular, had written at the end of the previous
century.
The second concerto of Opus 7 is notable for its short slow movement, for
strings only, which is a fine essay in chromatic harmony and quasi-vocal polyphony. No.8
has a finale in jig rhythm that, remarkably enough, is his only surviving concerto
movement in Vivaldian ritornello form. The sixth concerto from Opus 9
(1722), Albinoni's sequel to Opus 7, shows how he later came to model his two-oboe
concerti on those with one oboe, greatly expanding the dimensions and elaborating the
form. The three concerti with single oboe (Opus 7, Nos. 3, 6 and 9) all have finales in 3/8 or 6/8 that
exploit Albinoni's favourite rhythmic device of hemiola (where twice three units becomes
thrice two units or the reverse).
The present recording also includes the first concerto of the
set, for strings alone. This is in the style of an operatic overture (sinfonia), in which
the noise and bustle of the first movement is designed to silence a restive audience. The
short second movement is fused to the opening movement, again in imitation of the sinfonia
genre. The recording starts with a genuine sinfonia, thematically related to the concerto Opus 7, No.4,
which was taken back to Dresden c.1717 by the violinist Johann Georg Pisendel. The Saxon
musicians liked to add wind parts to the orchestral works in their repertoire, as shown in
the present performance. Note the typically Albinonian fugue, insistently cheerful, that
ends the work.
1995 Michael Talbot
Anthony Camden
Anthony Camden is solo oboist with the London Virtuosi, having
served as principal oboe in the London Symphony Orchestra from 1972 to 1988. His solo
recordings with the London Symphony Orchestra include the Bach Concerto for violin and
oboe, with Yehudi Menuhin, the Oboe Concerto by Grace Williams and a video of music
by Bach with Claudio Abbado. He founded the London Virtuosi in 1972 with James Galway and
John Georgiadis and the ensemble thereafter toured widely in the Americas, throughout
Europe and in the Far East. Anthony Camden himself, the son of a very distinguished
British bassoonist, has given master classes at many of the most famous conservatories and
schools of music and is currently Dean of Music at the Hong Kong Academy for Performing
Arts and an Honorary Professor of the Shanghai Conservatory of Music. In addition to some
400 recordings with the London Symphony Orchestra, his recordings with the London Virtuosi
include Mozart's Oboe Quartet, a Telemann Trio for flute, oboe and harpsichord with James
Galway and for RCA Haydn's Divertimento for
oboe and strings. Anthony Camden plays on a Howarth Oboe.
Alison Alty
Alison Alty first studied in London with Malcolm Messiter
before gaining a Bachelor of Music (Hons) degree at Manchester University. She then
studied with Anthony Camden at the Guildhall School of Music. After being awarded a double
distinction at the National Centre for Orchestral Studies she worked regularly as an
oboist with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and the
London Mozart Players. She is currently working as a free-lance oboist both with large
orchestras and also chamber ensembles.
The London Virtuosi
The London Virtuosi was founded in 1972 by Anthony Camden,
James Galway and principal string players from the London Symphony Orchestra. In the 21
years of its life the London Virtuosi has performed in all the major countries in the
world -USA, Canada, Mexico, Europe, China, Japan etc. It has been the resident orchestra
in Festivals in Britain and Spain and made many recordings. In recent years the London
Virtuosi has specialised in performing all the Brandenburg Concertos and a large
repertoire of Baroque and classical music. The orchestra consists of sixteen string
players, a harpsichord and an oboe and is directed from the violin by the leader John
Georgiadis, who was for fifteen years the Concertmaster of the London Symphony Orchestra.
Violins
John Georgiadis, Rolf Wilson, Barry Wilde, Benedict Croft, James McCleod, Roy Gillard, Roger Garland and Lilly Li.
Violas
Brian Hawkins, George Robertson and Dai Emanuel
Cellos
Douglas Cummings and Ben Kennard
Bass
Linda Houghton
Harpsichord
Paul Nicholson
John Georgiadis
Born at Southend-on-Sea, Essex, John Georgiadis studied the
violin at the Royal Academy of Music and after two and a half years as leader of the City
of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra moved to the London Symphony Orchestra, which he led for
some eleven years, through two periods between 1965 and 1979. An early interest in
conducting, supported by study with Sergiu Celibidache, brought an international career in
this role and appointment in 1991 as Principal Guest Conductor of the Queensland
Philharmonic Orchestra. His connection with the London Symphony Orchestra has been
continued with conducting engagements with the orchestra in London and in tours to the
United States and elsewhere. Since its foundation in 1972 John Georgiadis has been Music
Director and Conductor of the London Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra and from 1987 to 1990
played first violin in the Gabrieli Quartet.