At the tender age of nine, Felix Klieser dreamed of being able to play Mozart's
horn concertos. Today, 18 years later, that dream has finally come true
and Felix Klieser now performs on the world's foremost concert stages,
playing the very works which are part of any horn player's core
repertoire. Yet he took his time before recording all four of Mozart's
horn concertos: only after releasing three successful albums and winning
an ECHO Klassik award and the Leonard Bernstein Award did he go to Salzburg, in September 2018, to record them with the famous Camerata Salzburg ensemble.
Mozart always composed his works for wind instruments with a specific soloist in mind. Numerous anecdotes about those musicians and their relationship to Mozart abound. This goes for the horn concertos. The horn player Joseph Leutgeb, a close childhood friend of Mozart's, was more than once the butt of the composer's innate love of jests, mockery and similar sorts of nonsense. We know that Leutgeb once had to kneel in a corner until Mozart had finished composing, and was then ridiculed as an ass, ox and fool. Even in 1791, the year of his death, Mozart could not resist making fun of his friend, gleefully writing to his wife Constanze that he had called on Leutgeb as "a long-standing close acquaintance from Rome", prompting Leutgeb to spruce himself up "like on a Sunday, putting on his finest clothes, and beautifully coiffed". Nor could Mozart resist telling his "Stanzerl" how things had gone: "You can imagine how we laughed at him. I simply must have a fool on hand."
Mozart always composed his works for wind instruments with a specific soloist in mind. Numerous anecdotes about those musicians and their relationship to Mozart abound. This goes for the horn concertos. The horn player Joseph Leutgeb, a close childhood friend of Mozart's, was more than once the butt of the composer's innate love of jests, mockery and similar sorts of nonsense. We know that Leutgeb once had to kneel in a corner until Mozart had finished composing, and was then ridiculed as an ass, ox and fool. Even in 1791, the year of his death, Mozart could not resist making fun of his friend, gleefully writing to his wife Constanze that he had called on Leutgeb as "a long-standing close acquaintance from Rome", prompting Leutgeb to spruce himself up "like on a Sunday, putting on his finest clothes, and beautifully coiffed". Nor could Mozart resist telling his "Stanzerl" how things had gone: "You can imagine how we laughed at him. I simply must have a fool on hand."
Interpreting Mozart's music is however not all fun; it requires hard
work. Felix Klieser reports on his many years of studying and performing
the music: "Sometimes, there is just half a bar between sorrow and joy.
Working out the refinements of this music was perhaps the biggest
challenge of this project. I consciously allowed myself plenty of time
to familiarise myself over years with each little detail of this
fantastic music and to work out my own interpretation of it, paying the
greatest of respect to the composer." The spirit of Mozart is nowhere
more palpable than in Salzburg, the composer's home city and nowadays
something akin to a cult site. And there can hardly be a more suitable
orchestra to play with than the Camerata Salzburg, since his music is in
their blood. It is thanks to this constellation that Felix Klieser was
able to present the perfect ideal of his take on Mozart's music. "I am
proud and immensely grateful that this childhood dream has now come true
with the wonderful Camerata Salzburg. There can hardly be any other
orchestra that gives such fantastic performances of Mozart's works.
Together we have explored the simply endless spectrum of the Mozartian
sound world," the hornist enthuses.
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