Bewitching chamber music from a virtuoso flautist and French contemporary of Mozart.
This set of divertimento-like sonatas belongs to Devienne’s period in
service to Cardinal de Rohan during the first half of the 1780s, though
the manuscript is dedicated to another French nobleman. It is the work
of a highly accomplished musician in his early 20s: already the master
of his art as a performer on the flute, providing for himself and his
patrons music to delight the imagination without straining for depth and
profundity. Unlike Devienne’s concertos, which naturally featured
virtuoso solo parts, his chamber music tended to avoid excessive
technical difficulties because it was largely intended for an audience
of aristocratic amateur musicians.
The sonatas are all cast in two movements, none of them especially
slow except for a melancholy Siciliano to open the Third, which is the
only one of the set written in a minor key. Gracefulness is the quality
enshrined both by Devienne’s expressive markings and by the fluid charm
of his melodies. The scoring for an ensemble resembling that of the
Baroque trio sonata makes this music more accessible to a wider audience
than the trios for three flutes with which the composer is more fully
represented on record: there are no comparable versions of these works
presently available, making this disc a highly appealing acquisition for
anyone curious about the byways of Classical-era chamber music.
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