
For
all that there was a demand in the second half of the eighteenth
century for works scored for violin and keyboard from Enlightenment
professional musicians and music lovers alike, and for all Boccherini’s
fecundity in producing chamber music, only a single set of violin
sonatas appears to have been composed by him (and this has been recorded
for Glossa by Emilio Moreno
and Jacques Ogg). Any new work from Boccherini would speedily find
itself made available all across Europe (and beyond) in a variety of
different guises. It is not surprising, consequently, to find that
eighteenth-century contemporaries turned to the trios, quartets and
quintets of this then hugely-popular composer (Haydn was a “fan”), in
order to create transcriptions for violin and keyboard from them – but
with Boccherini unmistakably remaining the “author”.
Moreno
and Zapico, whose stylishly-performed survey ranges from early through
to late periods in Boccherini’s career – from Milan to Madrid – enter
into the transcription spirit themselves by producing two Boccherini
sonatas: these have been derived from a pair of original chamber works
with strong Spanish connotations, respectively nicknamed La Tirana and La Seguidilla.
Within the booklet Miguel Ángel Marín joins Moreno to argue strongly
for the arrangement being a valid means of preserving the unique and
original essence of a musical work. (Glossa)
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