Symphonies

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HOFFMEISTER
Symphonies
London Mozart Players / Matthias Bamert (conductor)

[ Chandos / CD ]

Release Date: Tuesday 20 December 2005

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

"As in the preceeding instalments of Chandos's 'Contemporaries of Mozart' series, Matthias Bamert and the London Mozart Players produce splendidly alert and stylish performances. No one interested in the byways of the late 18th century repertoire should fail to explore this."
(BBC Music Magazine 5 Stars)

"Chandos are to be congratulated for providing such an enterprising and interesting series and for ensuring that it is in such capable hands"
(MusicWeb Feb 2006)

The best-selling Contemporaries of Mozart series with Matthias Bamert and the London Mozart Players is one of Chandos' most long-running recording projects and they are delighted to add three symphonies by the German-Austrian composer Franz Anton Hoffmeister to the collection. His highly appealing music is full of fluent melodies and classical elegance, much admired by Schubert. All the works are here recorded for the first time.

The disc consists entirely of premiere recordings.

Matthias Bamert and the London Mozart Players have received consistently rave reviews throughout this comprehensive series.

Franz Anton Hoffmeister achieved fame as a publisher of works by Haydn, Mozart, Vanhal, Albrechtsberger and Pleyel as well as himself and others. The publishing business he founded in Leipzig in 1799, called the Bureau de Musique, published many of Beethoven's works, and was the forerunner of C.F. Peters, a firm that still exists. As a composer, he was a well-respected figure in his day, with a large and varied output of music, from keyboard and chamber works to operas, symphonies and concertos - including those rarities, concertos for viola and for double-bass. Shortly after his death, the musical lexicographer Ernst Ludwig Gerber praised Hoffmeister for his 'industry and versatility' and for 'the musical pleasure he has given in the most varied genres... [his] enrichment and advancement of instrumental music, especially through the richness of ideas in his large and brilliant symphonies... He earned his well-deserved and widespread reputation through the intrinsic merit of his works, which are not only rich in feeling and expression, but employ the instruments interestingly and appropriately, and are distinguished by their ease of performance... one might often have thought he was himself a virtuoso on the instruments for which he was writing'.

The Symphony in E major and Symphony in D major are early works, published in about 1778.They are tuneful and well crafted, with sparkling outer movements, graceful minuets and suitable touches of melancholy in the minor-mode slow movements. One can see why Hoffmeister became so popular with the musical public. The Symphony in G major is a later and more substantial work. Its title, 'La festa della Pace 1791', commemorates the signing of a peace treaty with Turkey by Emperor Leopold II on 4 August 1791, after an expensive and inconclusive war in the Balkans. The last movement, called 'Turchesco', features the same 'Turkish music' (triangle, cymbals and bass drum) that Haydn was to use a few years later in his 'Military' Symphony No. 100.The compositional style has matured and Hoffmeister has become quite adventurous harmonically.

Tracks:

Symphony in G major 'La festa della Pace 1791' 23:53
1 [I] Allegro 9:12
2 II Poco adagio 5:24
3 III Menuetto. Allegretto - Trio 4:13
4 IV Allegro molto, Turchesco 5:02

Symphony in E major
5 [I] Allegro molto 7:01
6 [II] Adagio non troppo 5:04
7 [III] Minuetto - Trio 3:17
8 [IV] Presto 3:43

Symphony in D major 18:33
9 [I] Allegro molto 7:07
10 [II] Adagio 4:14
11 [III] Menuetto - Tio 4:18
14 [IV] Finale. Allegro molto 4:18