Artist: Thurston Dart
Title: Mozart: Serenades
Year Of Release: 2020
Label: Universal Music
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 77:50 min
Total Size: 239 MB
Tracklist-01. Serenade in G Major, K. 525 "Eine kleine Nachtmusik" - 1. Allegro
02. Menuetto and Trio, K. 498a
03. Serenade in G Major, K. 525 "Eine kleine Nachtmusik" - 2. Romance. Andante
04. Serenade in G Major, K. 525 "Eine kleine Nachtmusik" - 3. Menuetto. Allegretto
05. Serenade in G Major, K. 525 "Eine kleine Nachtmusik" - 4. Rondo. Allegro
06. Serenata Notturna in D, K.239 - 1. Marcia. Maestoso
07. Serenata notturna in D Major, K. 239 - 2. Menuetto - Trio
08. Serenata notturna in D Major, K. 239 - 3. Rondeau. Allegretto - Adagio - Allegro
09. Symphony No. 29 in A Major, K. 201 - 1. Allegro moderato
10. Symphony No. 29 in A Major, K. 201 - 2. Andante
11. Symphony No. 29 in A Major, K. 201 - 3. Menuetto
12. Symphony No. 29 in A Major, K. 201 - 4. Allegro con spirito
13. 6 German Dances, K. 509 - Six German Dances, K. 509
14. 6 German Dances, K. 571 - Six German Dances, K. 571
A first international CD issue for two contrasting albums of light-orchestral Mozart from Joseph Keilberth and Thurston Dart. The two albums reissued here exemplify the postwar revolution of Classical-era performance styles. Having begun to make records in 1938, the L'Oiseau-Lyre label worked in the vanguard of the period-performance movement, yet in 1951 the Bamberg Symphony Orchestra and it's long-time principal conductor Joseph Keilberth were engaged to record the Symphony KV 201 and the two sets of German Dances. They did so in Paris, the day after giving a concert in the Salle Pleyel to open a tour of France, Spain and Portugal. The sessions prompted a laconic diary reflection from Keilberth - 'How hard it is to stick to a really secure 3/4 pulse' - but the authors of The Record Guide observed an unexpected lightness of touch about the results. L'Oiseau-Lyre's founder Louise Dyer continued, however, to engage artists who were scholars as much as musicians - none more eminent than Thurston Dart, who had produced a scholarly edition of Couperin's keyboard works on which much of the label's reputation was founded, and who directed his own ensembles such as the Philomusica of London with a sure and lively touch. This recording of Eine kleine Nachtmusik was the first - and still one of the only - to insert a replacement for the work's missing first minuet- in this case, Dart's own orchestration of a movement from a piano sonata, following a suggestion made by Alfred Einstein. It was also the first album of Mozart's orchestral music where the instrumentalists used 'period' bows, lighter and differently balanced, lending a natural shapeliness to the phrases.
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