- Audio CD (Jan 27 2004)
- Number of Discs: 1
- Format: Import
- Label: EMI Classics
- ASIN: B0000E6POK
- Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (1 customer review)
Product Details
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| 1. I Pastorale |
| 2. II Allegro Maestoso |
| 3. III Grave Assai |
| 4. IV Fandango |
| 5. I Allegro Vivo Assai |
| 6. II Adagio |
| 7. III Minuetto |
| 8. I Allegro Maestoso Assai |
| 9. II Andantino |
| 10. III Allegretto |
| 11. IV 'La Ritirata Di Madrid': Variazioni |
The current disc is certainly a case in point. In the hands of Fabio Biondi and his Europa Galante, Boccherini's chamber works comes fully to life. Most of the reason is sheer musicianship, of course. These guys know how to play music of the 18th century in a way that perfectly balances elegance and élan. There simply has never been a finer rendition of Boccherini's popular "Fandango" Quintet. The balances among the period instruments are so right and proper that among recordings of this work that I know, only here, on this disc, can you realize how masterly was Boccherini's writing for strings. If you already have a recording of this work, forget it--this new recording will open your ears. True, in the last movement Biondi jazzes things up a bit with the inclusion of a part for tambourine. I'm not sure whether there is some ad libidum indication in the score for this instrument or not, but I also don't care. The result is perfection.
The same can be said of the other performances on this CD. Boccherini's string quartets have been receiving well-merited attention lately on disc, especially from the Borciani Quartet on Naxos (worth investigating also), but Biondi has picked out a quartet that hasn't been recorded lately, at least as far as I know. The Quartet in G Minor is a serious but charming work well worth getting to know. And the final piece on the disc, the other most famous guitar quintet, "La ritirata di Madrid," emerges as much more than just that celebrated finale. The long, finely written sonata first movement is given its full due, as are the moving slow movement and buoyant Allegretto. But again, in the variation-form finale, there simply are no rivals to Biondi and friends. As with the finale of the "Fandango" Quintet, the producers of the disc help Boccherini out a bit. Here, Boccherini wished to portray the advance and recession of a night patrol in Madrid, and so the members of Europa Galante "proceed" across the soundstage from left to right, taking center stage for a powerful rendition of the middle variations of the movement before receding out of "sight" at last. For me, this isn't mucking around with things; it's just taking advantage of the medium and making "old" music live again for the listener. The best part is that we end up appreciating the achievement of Boccherini all the more. That's what classical music recordings should be all about. And I'm glad to report that thanks to musicians such as Europa Galante, classical music is alive and well in the early years of the 21st century.
The current disc is certainly a case in point. In the hands of Fabio Biondi and his Europa Galante, Boccherini's chamber works comes fully to life. Most of the reason is sheer musicianship, of course. These guys know how to play music of the 18th century in a way that perfectly balances elegance and élan. There simply has never been a finer rendition of Boccherini's popular "Fandango" Quintet. The balances among the period instruments are so right and proper that among recordings of this work that I know, only here, on this disc, can you realize how masterly was Boccherini's writing for strings. If you already have a recording of this work, forget it--this new recording will open your ears. True, in the last movement Biondi jazzes things up a bit with the inclusion of a part for tambourine. I'm not sure whether there is some ad libidum indication in the score for this instrument or not, but I also don't care. The result is perfection.
The same can be said of the other performances on this CD. Boccherini's string quartets have been receiving well-merited attention lately on disc, especially from the Borciani Quartet on Naxos (worth investigating also), but Biondi has picked out a quartet that hasn't been recorded lately, at least as far as I know. The Quartet in G Minor is a serious but charming work well worth getting to know. And the final piece on the disc, the other most famous guitar quintet, "La ritirata di Madrid," emerges as much more than just that celebrated finale. The long, finely written sonata first movement is given its full due, as are the moving slow movement and buoyant Allegretto. But again, in the variation-form finale, there simply are no rivals to Biondi and friends. As with the finale of the "Fandango" Quintet, the producers of the disc help Boccherini out a bit. Here, Boccherini wished to portray the advance and recession of a night patrol in Madrid, and so the members of Europa Galante "proceed" across the soundstage from left to right, taking center stage for a powerful rendition of the middle variations of the movement before receding out of "sight" at last. For me, this isn't mucking around with things; it's just taking advantage of the medium and making "old" music live again for the listener. The best part is that we end up appreciating the achievement of Boccherini all the more. That's what classical music recordings should be all about. And I'm glad to report that thanks to musicians such as Europa Galante, classical music is alive and well in the early years of the 21st century.
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