[ BIS SACD / Hybrid SACD ]
Release Date: Thursday 31 December 2015
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In the mid-1980s, Donna Agrell acquired a rare Grenser & Wiesner bassoon, built in Dresden sometime around 1820. She has been using it for more than 1,500 performances since then, many of them with the Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century, of which she has been a member since it was founded. The bassoon came in its original case, with an address label indicating that the instrument had been delivered to Stockholm. Further research into the Stockholm music scene during the early 19th century revealed that instruments from Grenser & Wiesner were popular in Sweden. One who swore by his bassoon from the company was Frans Preumayr, a musician of German origin who played in the orchestra of the Royal Opera, but also made a name for himself abroad as a bassoon virtuoso, garnering praise in London and on the continent. Such a gifted player naturally inspired composers to write for him, and these included his father-in-law, the clarinet virtuoso Berhard Henrik Crusell, the flamboyant music director at the Stockholm opera, Édouard Du Puy, and a young Franz Berwald, employed among the strings of the opera orchestra. For the present recording Donna Agrell has chosen three chamber works which were all premièred with Preumayr on the bassoon. She is joined by colleagues from the Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century as well as by Ronald Brautigam - all of them playing period instruments - in Berwald's celebrated Septet in B flat major and the less well-known Quartet for piano and winds, and in Du Puy's Quintet for bassoon and strings.
"Donna Agrell is an internationally-renowned period bassoon player. She is a founding member of the Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century as well as a teacher at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis and the Royal Conservatoire in The Hague. Donna Agrell acquired her eleven-keyed Grenser & Wiesner bassoon in 1985, on which she has played in over 1500 performances. If you want to explore these pieces on period instruments, or if you are interested in hearing an authentic early 19th century bassoon being used to perform repertoire written for it, you should definitely acquire this album." (MusicWeb)
"his remarkable recording owes its existence to the fine detective work of the solo bassoonist, Donna Agrell. She plays a Grenser & Wiesner instrument which she bought some thirty years ago and whose case had a Swedish address label on it; the connection led her to Frans Preumayr who moved there with two of his brothers at the beginning of the 19th century to join the Royal Orchestra. The clarinettist in that ensemble was none other than Bernhard Henrik Crusell, who as well as composing several pieces for him later became his father-in-law. The works on this CD are by another member of the orchestra, Franz Berwald, and its director, Edouard Du Puy. It is rare for such obscure repertoire to be given such fine performances, and the tale behind the whole project is enchanting!" (Early Music Review)
Franz Berwald:
Septet in B flat major for clarinet, horn, bassoon, violin, viola, cello and double bass
Quartet in E flat major for piano, clarinet, horn and bassoon
Édouard Du Puy:
Quintet in A minor for bassoon and strings