Alec Frank-Gemmill / Alasdair Beatson A NOBLE AND MELANCHOLY INSTRUMENT music for horns and pianos of the 19th century
The 19th century saw huge developments in the design of many musical
instruments. In some cases changes were adopted more or less
universally: the fortepiano that Mozart knew, a five-octave instrument
constructed entirely of wood, had by around 1900 grown into the modern
grand piano with over seven octaves and a cast-iron frame. With other
instruments, progress was less streamlined.
As late as 1865, the natural, valveless horn of Beethoven's time
remained the instrument of choice for Brahms when he wrote his famous
Horn Trio, and when valves began to be introduced, makers and musicians
in Germany, France and Vienna favoured different solutions, offering
different results in terms of sound and requiring different playing
techniques. The present disc is a unique combination of recital and
history lesson, with a young British team performing music from between
1800 and 1942 on no less than eight different historic instruments: four
horns and four pianos. This gives us the opportunity to hear the works
on instruments that the different composers would have recognized,
whether Beethoven's Sonata in F major (a natural horn from 1800 and a
fortepiano from 1815) or the Villanelle by Paul Dukas from 1906 (an
early 20th-century cor à pistons and a Bechstein from 1898). Both
notable performers on modern instruments, Alec Frank-Gemmill and
Alasdair Beatson here revel in the sonic possibilities offered by the
historic instruments with results that are as delighting as they are
enlightening. (BIS Records)
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