BBC Music Magazine

The Beginnings of the Violin Concerto in France

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Works by J Aubert, M Corrette, Exaudet, J-M Leclair and Quentin Johannes Pramsohler (violin); Ensemble Diderot

Audax ADX 13782 66:08 mins

Tracing the dawn of the violin concerto in early 18th-century France, this disc includes two world premiere recordings: Jean-marie Leclair’s Concerto in E flat and André-joseph Exaudet’s Concerto ‘for five instrument­s’. Violinist Johannes Pramsohler and the period-instrument Ensemble Diderot bring sinewy energy to the buoyant rhythms of the Leclair, while Exaudet’s felicitous concerto stands out for the dramatic Fantasia-cadenza of the last movement – a recently-discovered showcase of virtuosic tricks, including some fiendish double stoppings which Pramsohler breezes effortless­ly through.

There are also two works by Jacques Aubert. Serving as the disc’s curtain raiser is his perky D major work whose pedestrian harmonies are lightened by Pramsohler’s graceful violin playing. More interestin­g is Aubert’s E minor work, with its throbbing rhythms, echo effects and colourful imitations of a Carillon – all brought to pulsating life here. The players throw into high relief the antitheses of Jean-baptiste Quentin’s A minor Concerto, whose melancholy opening movement is treated here with due gravitas and offset by the sprightly Allegro that follows – Pramsohler despatchin­g the violin flourishes with restrained bravura. Finally, Corrette’s Concerto comique No. 25, a theatrical interlude featuring delightful arrangemen­ts of the exotic dance

Les Sauvages (made famous by Rameau) and the popular tune La Furstember­g. Between them, in a delicate Andante, Corrette weaves a tapestry of pizzicato strings around an airy song-tune. Playing one to a part, Ensemble Diderot douses the performanc­e with frothy wit while the recorded sound has a pleasant bloom. Kate Bolton-porciatti

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

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