9.30 a.m.
Building a Library: Sarah Devonold compares recordings of Mozart's Serenade No.10 in B-flat, 'Gran Partita', K.361/370a - and picks a favourite.
'Gran Partita' as a subtitle implies that Mozart's Serenade No.10 is a large ambitious work, and although the work is clearly conceived as a whole 'cycle', it was not ascribed to the score by the composer himself. Mozart's vast 7-movement work for 13 wind instruments has an elusive compositional history and was thought for a long time to have been composed in 1780 or 1781 for a performance in Munich. No mention of the Serenade appears in any of Mozart's letters from that time and, in the 1970s, when the new critical edition of Mozart's works was published, after exhaustive studies of the autograph, it is now believed that the work was first performed in 1784 at a benefit concert for the Vienna-based basset-horn player Anton Stadler. The Serenade also bears the hallmarks of Mozart's later writing and certainly postdates the two wind serenades in E flat and C minor that were definitely composed in 1782.
The mysterious circumstances of both the subtitle 'Gran Partita' and the many versions of the score give the performer some interesting challenges, which Sarah Devonold discusses with Andrew McGregor.
Available recordings:-
Albion Ensemble *
Amati Ensemble, Salzburg Soloists
Amphion Wind Octet
L'Orchestre da la Suisse Romande, Ernest Ansermet
Berlin Philharmonic Wind Ensemble *
Berlin Philharmonic Wind Ensemble, Karl Böhm
Bläser der Berliner Philharmoniker
Staatskapelle Berlin, Leo Blech *
Ensemble Intercontemporain, Pierre Boulez
Ensemble a vent, Maurice Bourgue
Orchestra of the 18th Century, Frans Brüggen
Chamber Orchestra of Europe Wind Soloists *
Orchestre de Chambre de Lausanne, Jesús López-Cobos
President's Own United States Marine Band, Michael J. Colburn *
Concerto Köln
Danish Wind Octet with Friends *
Ensemble Philidor
Eastman Wind Ensemble, Frederick Fennell
Wiener Philharmoniker, Wilhelm Furtwängler
German Wind Soloists
London Mozart Ensemble Wind Ensemble, Jane Glover
National Chamber Players, Lowell Graham *
Les Dissonances, David Grimal *
Winds of the Orchestre des Champs-Élysées, Philippe Herreweghe *
Nachtmusique, Eric Hoeprich
Amadeus Winds, Christopher Hogwood
I Solisti del Vento
Scottish National Orchestra, Paavo Järvi
Ensemble Fidelio, Armin Jordan *
Tapiola Sinfonietta, Jean-Jacques Kantorow
Klangverwaltung
Consortium Classicum, Dieter Klöcker
Members of Berliner Philharmoniker, Fritz Lehmann *
Linos Ensemble *
London Philharmonic Wind Ensembl
London Wind Quintet and Ensemble, Otto Klemperer
LSO Wind Ensemble (SACD)
London Winds *
London Wind Soloists, Jack Brymer *
Hungarian State Opera Wind Ensemble, Ervin Lukacs *
European Union Chamber Orchestra, Santiago Mantas
Chamber Orchestra of Moscow, Lev Markiz *
Academy of St Martin in the Fields Wind Ensemble, Sir Neville Marriner
Berliner Philharmoniker, Zubin Mehta *
Münchner Philharmoniker, Zubin Mehta
Bläserensemble, Sabine Meyer *
Marlboro Festival Orchestra, Marcel Moyce
BMC Wind Ensemble, Louis Moyse*
Slovak Chamber Orchestra, Anton Nanut
Octophoros *
Orpheus Chamber Orchestra
Ottetto Italiano
Orchestre de Chambre Jean-Francois Paillard, Jean-François Paillard
Royal Academy of Music Soloists Ensemble, Trevor Pinnock (SACD)
Quatuor Dialogues (arr. Ewald Demeyere) (SACD)
Sixth Floor Orchestra, Jukka Rautasalo
Hans Rosbaud Chamber Ensemble
Wind Soloists of the Chamber Orchestra of Europe, Alexander Schneider
Schweizer Blaeserensemble
Stuttgart Winds (including Blu-ray audio version
Swedish Serenade Ensemble *
Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, Václav Talich
Thaous Ensemble
Netherlands Wind Ensemble, Edo de Waart
American Chamber Winds, David Waybright *
Zefiro Ensemble
* = download only
Building a Library: Sarah Devonold compares recordings of Mozart's Serenade No.10 in B-flat, 'Gran Partita', K.361/370a - and picks a favourite.
'Gran Partita' as a subtitle implies that Mozart's Serenade No.10 is a large ambitious work, and although the work is clearly conceived as a whole 'cycle', it was not ascribed to the score by the composer himself. Mozart's vast 7-movement work for 13 wind instruments has an elusive compositional history and was thought for a long time to have been composed in 1780 or 1781 for a performance in Munich. No mention of the Serenade appears in any of Mozart's letters from that time and, in the 1970s, when the new critical edition of Mozart's works was published, after exhaustive studies of the autograph, it is now believed that the work was first performed in 1784 at a benefit concert for the Vienna-based basset-horn player Anton Stadler. The Serenade also bears the hallmarks of Mozart's later writing and certainly postdates the two wind serenades in E flat and C minor that were definitely composed in 1782.
The mysterious circumstances of both the subtitle 'Gran Partita' and the many versions of the score give the performer some interesting challenges, which Sarah Devonold discusses with Andrew McGregor.
Available recordings:-
Albion Ensemble *
Amati Ensemble, Salzburg Soloists
Amphion Wind Octet
L'Orchestre da la Suisse Romande, Ernest Ansermet
Berlin Philharmonic Wind Ensemble *
Berlin Philharmonic Wind Ensemble, Karl Böhm
Bläser der Berliner Philharmoniker
Staatskapelle Berlin, Leo Blech *
Ensemble Intercontemporain, Pierre Boulez
Ensemble a vent, Maurice Bourgue
Orchestra of the 18th Century, Frans Brüggen
Chamber Orchestra of Europe Wind Soloists *
Orchestre de Chambre de Lausanne, Jesús López-Cobos
President's Own United States Marine Band, Michael J. Colburn *
Concerto Köln
Danish Wind Octet with Friends *
Ensemble Philidor
Eastman Wind Ensemble, Frederick Fennell
Wiener Philharmoniker, Wilhelm Furtwängler
German Wind Soloists
London Mozart Ensemble Wind Ensemble, Jane Glover
National Chamber Players, Lowell Graham *
Les Dissonances, David Grimal *
Winds of the Orchestre des Champs-Élysées, Philippe Herreweghe *
Nachtmusique, Eric Hoeprich
Amadeus Winds, Christopher Hogwood
I Solisti del Vento
Scottish National Orchestra, Paavo Järvi
Ensemble Fidelio, Armin Jordan *
Tapiola Sinfonietta, Jean-Jacques Kantorow
Klangverwaltung
Consortium Classicum, Dieter Klöcker
Members of Berliner Philharmoniker, Fritz Lehmann *
Linos Ensemble *
London Philharmonic Wind Ensembl
London Wind Quintet and Ensemble, Otto Klemperer
LSO Wind Ensemble (SACD)
London Winds *
London Wind Soloists, Jack Brymer *
Hungarian State Opera Wind Ensemble, Ervin Lukacs *
European Union Chamber Orchestra, Santiago Mantas
Chamber Orchestra of Moscow, Lev Markiz *
Academy of St Martin in the Fields Wind Ensemble, Sir Neville Marriner
Berliner Philharmoniker, Zubin Mehta *
Münchner Philharmoniker, Zubin Mehta
Bläserensemble, Sabine Meyer *
Marlboro Festival Orchestra, Marcel Moyce
BMC Wind Ensemble, Louis Moyse*
Slovak Chamber Orchestra, Anton Nanut
Octophoros *
Orpheus Chamber Orchestra
Ottetto Italiano
Orchestre de Chambre Jean-Francois Paillard, Jean-François Paillard
Royal Academy of Music Soloists Ensemble, Trevor Pinnock (SACD)
Quatuor Dialogues (arr. Ewald Demeyere) (SACD)
Sixth Floor Orchestra, Jukka Rautasalo
Hans Rosbaud Chamber Ensemble
Wind Soloists of the Chamber Orchestra of Europe, Alexander Schneider
Schweizer Blaeserensemble
Stuttgart Winds (including Blu-ray audio version
Swedish Serenade Ensemble *
Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, Václav Talich
Thaous Ensemble
Netherlands Wind Ensemble, Edo de Waart
American Chamber Winds, David Waybright *
Zefiro Ensemble
* = download only
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