Mozart / Crusell / Bach, J.C.: Music for Oboe and Strings
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Mozart Crusell J.C. Bach Chamber Music for Oboe and Strings In 1777 Mozart set out from Salzburg, accompanied only by his mother, to seek his fortune...
Mozart Crusell J.C. Bach
Chamber Music for Oboe and Strings
In 1777 Mozart set out from Salzburg, accompanied
only by his mother, to seek his fortune elsewhere. His
father Leopold, who had guided his son's career, was
compelled to remain at home, out of necessary
prudence, while Mozart himself had been able to travel
only by resigning from the court musical establishment
of the ruling Archbishop. Mozart's journey took him, by
the end of October, to Mannheim, the seat of the Elector
Palatine and a city that boasted the most famous
orchestra in Europe. He was clearly delighted at his
reception by musicians of the Mannheim court. In his
second letter home to his father he gives an account of
his visit to the house of the director of court instrumental
music, Christian Cannabich. There he met other
musicians, including an oboist whose playing he praises
and to whom he has given a copy of his oboe concerto,
although he has forgotten the man's name. In later
letters he identifies him as Friedrich Ramm. The four
months in Mannheim brought no offer of employment
from the Elector, and Mozart planned to move on to
Paris, at first hoping to travel with Ramm and other
wind players from Mannheim, for whom he was to write
a sinfonia concertante. He eventually travelled to Paris
with his mother in March, but, for whatever reason,
failed to find the patronage he needed. In July his
mother fell ill and died, and his father, anxious as ever
about his son, urged him to return to Salzburg, where he
had procured for him the position of court organist.
After long delays, the result of a return to Mannheim,
where he renewed his attentions to the young singer
Aloysia Weber, and time spent in Munich with his
cousin, Mozart was back in his detested Salzburg by
January 1779. In 1780, however, he was able to renew
his association with the Mannheim musicians who had
moved with the Elector to Munich, his capital as Elector
of Bavaria, a position inherited on the death of his
predecessor. Here Mozart was commissioned to write
an opera for the court, Idomeneo.
It was at this time, probably in January 1781, that he
wrote his Oboe Quartet in F major, K370, for Ramm.
He was soon to be summoned to Vienna by his patron,
the Archbishop of Salzburg, and all too soon to quarrel
with his and his father's patron, to spend his last ten
years in precarious independence in Vienna. The
quartet opens with an Allegro, the oboe stating the first
subject and leading the way to a secondary theme,
introduced by the violin. Instruments enter in imitation
of each other in the central development, duly followed
by a final recapitulation. The strings open the D minor
Adagio, in which the oboe adds an embellished upper
part. The final Rondeau allows the oboe the first
statement of the principal theme, echoed by the violin,
providing the framework for contrasting episodes that
would have allowed Ramm full scope for the display of
his ability, so much admired by the composer.
Mozart embarked on independent life in Vienna
with a degree of optimism, marrying, without his
father's approval, the younger sister of the singer who
had so enchanted him in Mannheim, and contributing to
the German operatic repertoire encouraged by the
Emperor a new Turkish Singspiel, Die Entführung aus
dem Serail. His Serenade in C minor, K388, for oboes,
clarinets, horns and bassoons, was probably written in
1782 and it was to this work that he turned in 1787 or
1788 to provide the basis of the third of his set of three
string quintets, offered for subscription in April of the
latter year. By now Mozart's circumstances had
changed. His father had died in 1787 and his own
financial difficulties were mounting in the political and
economic problems of the time. He refers to the
quintets, later to be published by Artaria, in a letter to
his fellow-mason Michael Puchberg seeking loans to
tide him over. The Quintet in C minor, K406, heard in a
version for oboe, violin, two violas and cello, opens
with a figure based on the ascending triad of C minor,
followed in the fourth bar by a characteristic descending
interval that is to return. This strong opening, in which
all join, is answered more gently, and this first subject is
led to the E flat major second, preceded by an emphatic
unison from the whole ensemble. The relatively short
central development brings surprises, breaking off on a
second occasion before the return of the first subject in a
final recapitulation. The E flat major triple metre
Andante brings customary embellishment in the upper
part and leads to a Menuetto in canone, in which there is
a canon at first between oboe and cello, and a C major
trio in which the canon, now between the upper
instruments, is inverted. The last movement is a set of
variations that in one passage, at least, shows traces of
its origin. The theme returns finally in C major to bring
the work to a conclusion.
The clarinettist and composer Bernhard Henrik
Crusell was born in the Finnish town of Uusikaupunki
(Nystad) in 1775, the son of a book-binder. He had his
first instruction in the clarinet at the age of eight from an
army player and was encouraged by an officer to join the
band of the Queen Dowager's Regiment, which, in 1791,
in Stockholm, he conducted, before appointment to the
court musical establishment in 1793 as first clarinettist.
Study with the Abbe Georg Joseph Vogler, the Court
Kapellmeister, and of the clarinet with Franz Tausch in
Berlin, brought a career as a soloist, with a visit to Paris
in 1803 that allowed composition lessons with Berton
and Gossec, and further concert tours abroad. In
Stockholm in 1818 he was appointed musical director of
the two Royal Grenadier Regiments, a position he held
until his death in 1838. His varied compositions include
works for his own instrument, an opera, and chamber
music, and he was also responsible for Swedish
translations of various opera libretti. His Divertimento in
C major, Op. 9, was written in 1822, scored for oboe and
string quartet. The opening Allegro, with due
modulation to the dominant, frames a central C minor
Andante poco Adagio, returning to be completed by a
rapid final section. The work is adept in its handling of
the oboe, on which demands of virtuosity are made, as it
leads the way, linking the principal sections of the piece.
The youngest son and eleventh of the thirteen
children of Johann Sebastian Bach, Johann Christian
Bach was born in Leipzig in 1735 and presumably had
his early musical training under his father, whom he
assisted as the latter neared the end of his life. On his
father's death in 1750 he joined his brother Carl Philipp
Emanuel in Potsdam, and in 1754 moved to Italy,
studying with Padre Martini, becoming a Catholic, and
establishing himself in Milan, where, in 1760, he
became second organist at the Cathedral. His growing
reputation as a composer of Italian opera led to an
invitation in 1762 to London, where, like Handel before
him, he enjoyed royal patronage and a career as a
composer of Italian opera and as a versatile contributor
to the musical life of the city. In later years he
experienced financial difficulties, as fashions changed.
He died in London in 1782, mourned by Mozart in
Vienna, who would have remembered his kindness at
their first meeting in London in 1764. Much of Johann
Christian's chamber music is varied in scoring, often
combining wind and string instruments. His Oboe Quartet
in B flat major was issued in August 1776 by Sieber in
Paris, as the first of a set of concertante string quartets
by J.C. Bach and his friend and colleague in London, the
gamba-player C.F. Abel. This replaced a quartet by
Giardini, orchestral leader at the King's Theatre, in an
otherwise similar set of six quartets published in
London. It appears in a manuscript in Genoa in a version
for oboe and strings and in another version there, in E flat
major, for cor anglais and strings, while the Brussels
Bibliothèque Albert 1er attributes the work to Haydn, as
some others have done. The pleasing first movement in
sonata-allegro form is followed by a Rondeau that
follows Bach's normal practice in offering a second
episode in the relative minor key, the whole movement
suggesting, in its metre, a minuet with two trios.
Keith Anderson
Oboe Quartet in F major, K. 370 (more info)
Composed by:
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Conducted by:
Luz Leskowitz
Keisuke Wakao, oboe
Cathy Basrak, viola
Max Artved, oboe
Joris van den Hauwe, oboe
John Dee, oboe
Jozsef Kiss, oboe
Malcolm Lowe, violin
Elise Batnes, violin
Tue Lautrup, viola
Lars Holm Johansen, cello
Simon Fuchs, oboe
Lajos Lencses, oboe
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Allegro - 6:33
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Adagio - 3:20
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Rondeau: Allegro - 4:22
Divertimento in C major, Op. 9 (more info)
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Allegro - 3:40
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Andante poco Adagio - 4:30
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Allegro - 1:45
String Quartet in B flat major, W. B60 (arr. for oboe quartet) (more info)
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Allegro - 5:45
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Rondeau: Grazioso - 4:37
String Quintet No. 2 in C minor, K. 406 (arr. for oboe quintet) (more info)
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Allegro - 8:11
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Andante - 3:57
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Menuetto in canone - 4:02
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Allegro - 6:10