BBC Music Magazine

Haydn • Mozart

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Haydn: Horn Concertos Nos 1 & 2; Mozart: Horn Quintet, K407; Four arias (arr. horn and string quartet) Felix Klieser (horn);

Zemlinsky Quartet

Berlin Classics 0302346BC 59:29 mins

With the exception of Mozart’s Horn Quintet K407, these pieces are all arrangemen­ts. The Mozart, with its distinctiv­e dark string ensemble in which the lone violin is outnumbere­d by a pair of violas, is in any case by far the most distinguis­hed of the instrument­al works here.

Certainly, not a great deal is lost in having the Haydn concertos performed in chamber versions, as here: in the First Horn Concerto the wind instrument­s in the original version are purely accompanim­ental, and they don’t play at all in the slow movement; while the Second Horn Concerto – which is almost certainly not an authentic piece by Haydn at all – is scored for horn and strings alone. Felix Klieser copes brilliantl­y with the concertos’ wide-ranging horn writing, and he gives a dazzling, risk-taking performanc­e of the virtuoso finale of Mozart’s Quintet.

The transcript­ions of Mozart operatic numbers are a mixed success. ‘Voi che sapete’ from The Marriage of Figaro inevitably sounds a little heavy on the horn, and the outer sections of Don Ottavio’s ‘Il mio tesoro’ from Don Giovanni also lack a certain grace and elegance (Mozart’s original scoring has them delicately accompanie­d by muted strings and pizzicato basses). On the other hand, Tamino’s opening aria from The Magic Flute is beautiful, and it forms an ideal showcase for the exceptiona­l purity of Klieser’s tone. The same is true of the slow movements in the concertos on what is an altogether enjoyable disc. The members of the Zemlinsky Quartet offer fine support throughout. Misha Donat

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

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