Reviews

Albinoni, concerti à cinque

ALBINONI 12 Concerti à cinque, Op. 9
Andrew Manze (violin); Frank de Bruine, Alfredo Bernardini (oboes);
The Academy of Ancient Music/Christopher Hogwood
Decca 458 129-2OH2
(two discs: I17 minutes: DDD).

Here are two reviews of this recording, from Gramophone, October 1999, and below it, one from BBC Music Magazine October 1999:

For consistently amiable, if undemanding entertainment, Albinoni’s concertos, with or without oboe, or oboes, are hard to beat. Christopher Hogwood and the Academy of Ancient Music here perform the 12 concertos contained in the collection published in 1722 as the composer’s Op. 9. Neither the formal content nor the musical style differs significantly from Albinoni’s earlier collection, Op. 7 (1715); each set includes four concertos for strings, four for strings with oboe and four for strings with two oboes. In the Op. 9 set, though, greater emphasis is placed on solo violin in the all-string pieces.

I seem never to tire of these endlessly charming works and it is this set that perhaps contains Albinoni’s crowning achievement in the concerto sphere, a lyrical Adagio for solo oboe with a simple string arpeggio accompaniment belonging to the Second Concerto. Its wistful, undulating melody lingers forever in the memory, outclassing in every conceivable respect the spurious G minor Adagio, which persists like a virus, but upon which, paradoxically, Albinoni’s reputation during the second half of the twentieth century has largely been established. There are many delightful slow movements in this set, but also some irresistibly sprightly ones. These belong mainly to the pieces for two oboes, the Third and Sixth Concertos of the set providing spirited examples.

None of this is lost either on the three accomplished soloists – Andrew Manze, Frank de Bruine and Alfredo Bernardini – or the strings of The Academy of Ancient Music which provide lively and sensitive support. In short, the set affords uninterrupted pleasure from start to finish.

Gramophone, October 1999

Albinoni was at the height of his imaginative powers when, in 1722, he published his penultimate set of concertos. They are grouped in sets of four – violin solo, oboe solo and two oboes respectively with great variety of both structure and colour. In No. 10 the solo violin creeps unannounced from within the opening strings; two finales open with fugal textures, collapsing to simple harmony as the soloist enters. No. 7 has pizzicato bass and no harpsichord; oboes bray like hunting horns in No. 3, leap trumpet-like in No. 12. Albinoni’s alluringly purposeful harmony, side-stepped cadences, brief repetitions which paradoxically generate yet more urgency in the musical flow, create the Venetian concerto at its irresistible best.

The performance here matches the composer’s inspiration. The Academy strings, finely focused, articulate lightly. Manze brings to the four violin concertos remarkable freshness and spontaneity, and considerable virtuosity in the flashing off-the-string passages, No. 4 for instance. The oboists sound generally more considered, their tone refined but never to the point of losing their individual distinctivenes, nicely emphasised by their stereo interplay in the double concertos. Excellent recording, with soloists distinguished by timber rather than by artificial separation, contributes to making this an outstanding issue.

Performance *****
Sound *****

BBC Music Magazine October 1999