Chamber music

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W. A. MOZART
Chamber music
Pyramide Ensemble

[ Brilliant Classics / CD ]

Release Date: Saturday 20 September 2014

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For many Mozart is more 'perfector' than 'innovator', a composer who drew on an already extant vocabulary to create some of the greatest works in European culture. In this recording, however, we are introduced to Mozart the 'trailblazer': the first composer in history to take wind instruments seriously.

Whereas his colleagues were inclined to employ the so‐called Harmonie merely to reinforce the general sonority, Mozart took it upon himself to exploit the character of each of these instruments, endowing them with a much more individualistic, distinctive role - as soloists, in the orchestra or in chamber music, the subject of this engaging release. Such writing is evident in the Quartet for oboe and strings, a work of wide leaps and brilliant passages that was composed for the Mannheim virtuoso Friedrich Ramm, and the Flute Quartet in D - written for the highly accomplished amateur musician Ferdinand Dejean and in which the principal voice, equipped with pearling runs in the first movement, is treated with great care, displaying nothing of the composer's supposed aversion to the instrument. Both works are milestones of their respective genres, and they are joined on this recording by three pieces originally composed for mechanical organ (and arranged for this recording by flautist Markus Brönnimann), originally commissioned by Count Deym to be used as accompaniment for a newly erected mausoleum in Vienna. Among these, the Fantasia in F minor K608 stands out as the most intense and dramatic, combining rigorous harmonic invention with memorable melody, polyphonic complexity and compositional virtuosity. Brönnimann's suggestion as to a possible comparison with the works of the American‐born composer Conlon Nancarrow, as mentioned in the booklet note, reveals just how forwardthinking this music was for its time. At hand to perform these works is Ensemble Pyramide, a group whose diverse repertoire ranges from Baroque to 21st century and whose recital programmes are often based around the juxtaposition between new and old. Based in Zurich and awarded the city's cultural stipend 'Werkjahr für Interpretation' in 2006, its recordings for radio and on CD (which take in labels such as Naxos and Ars Musici) are complemented by an active recording schedule throughout Europe.

Tracks:

Oboe Quartet in F major, K370
Flute Quartet No. 1 in D major, K285
Fantasia in F minor for a mechanical organ, K608
Andante in F major, K616
Fantasia in F minor for a mechanical organ, K594