Mozart’s four horn concertos are among his most famous,
most recognizable pieces of music; accordingly, we find any number of fine
recordings of them in the catalogue. In 1993 Sony Classics originally released
the ones we get on this Newton Classics 2012 reissue with Ab Koster on horn,
supported by the period-instruments band Tafelmusik lead by Maestro Bruno Weil.
Period or modern, Koster and Tafelmusik do up the music as well as anybody, so
it’s good to have them back at hand.
The Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra, as I’m sure you know, is
a Canadian-based period-instruments ensemble founded in 1979 and specializing
in early music. Jeanne Lamon has been the group’s primary conductor since 1981,
and Bruno Weil, featured here, is their principal guest conductor. Soloist Ab
Koster has been performing for even longer than Tafelmusik have existed, so he
knows his way around a horn. Here, he plays the natural horn, on which he has
also performed with such notables as Gustav Leonhardt and Frans Brüggen. The
historical natural horn that Koster uses for the recording dates from the early
nineteenth century, built by Ignaz Lorenz of Linz, and it must be a bear to
control. The natural horn did not yet have the valves of a modern horn, the
instrument’s range manipulated by various detachable tube lengths (called
“crooks”) and by hand-stopping (the player’s hand working inside the bell of
the horn).
Anyway, things begin with the little Rondo in E flat, K371, which, like Mozart’s other works for horn,
the composer tailored for playing by his longtime friend, the horn virtuoso
Joseph Leutgeb. The Rondo is the only
movement of a horn concerto Mozart never completed, and even this Rondo he left unfinished. Scholar Robert
Levin completed the version we hear on the disc. (Levin also reconstructed the Rondo for K412 later in the program.)
Maestro Weil’s conducting and the orchestral playing
throughout the album are vivid, vivacious, and accomplished. The melodies flow
easily, with quick yet relaxed tempos. The horn sound is wonderfully plush,
mellow, well rounded, and mellifluent, Koster able to coax any number of
remarkable effects from the instrument. And Koster’s own cadenza’s sound quite
imaginative.
I enjoyed the performances of Koster and company
immensely, and I have no reservation in encouraging anyone who enjoys the Horn Concertos as well as the sound and
style of period instruments and period practices to sample them. However, I
continue to prefer by a slim margin the Harmonia Mundi period-instruments
recording with Nicholas McGegan, the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra, and
soloist Lowell Greer. The PBO interpretation is every bit as lively and
informed as Tafelmusik’s, and it has the advantage of an even more-natural
orchestral setting. Then, too, while the Newton Classics/Sony recording can
sometimes sound a tad more transparent than the HM one, it is also a touch
brighter, so the sonic qualities pretty much even out.
If I had to fault the album at all, it’s that it doesn’t
contain very much music at just barely over an hour. The Horn Concertos themselves are rather brief affairs, and the added Rondo in E flat is only five minutes
long. Nevertheless, Newton Classics are only giving us what Sony originally
provided, so we can’t blame them for short measure. Besides, it’s the quality
of the music that counts, not its length, and Koster and Tafelmusik provide a
high measure of performance and sound values.
Another minor snag relates to the packaging. It seems that
whoever numbered the tracks on the back of the jewel case didn’t bother
listening to the disc. The back lists fifteen tracks, but the disc contains
only twelve. It took me a moment or two to recognize the mistake; the case
lists the three cadenzas Koster devised as separate tracks, while the actual
disc incorporates them into the regular tracks. So if you want to avoid
confusion (if Newton doesn’t reprint their listing by the time you read this),
you might want to renumber the tracks yourself.
Sony recorded Horn
Concertos 2, 3, and 4 at Doopsgezinde Kerk, Haarlem,
Netherlands in 1992 and the Rondo and
Concerto No. 1 at Glenn Gould Studio,
Toronto, Canada in 1993, Newton Classics releasing them in 2012. The sound in Nos. 2, 3, and 4 is quite good,
the horn well integrated into the orchestral accompaniment. The midrange
appears reasonably well detailed, and the depth of image is fairly realistic,
with the Netherlands venue providing a warm, ambient glow to surround the
instruments. The Toronto studio, though, seems to produce a somewhat brighter,
harder sound, with the horn at times sounding a bit too big or too close.
To hear a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
JJP
JJP
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