Home » Audio » Movies & Music » I bought the Mozart Clarinet Concerto for Robert Marcellus, but...
I bought the Mozart Clarinet Concerto for Robert Marcellus, but... [message #7385] Wed, 14 February 2007 04:13 Go to next message
Bill Epstein is currently offline  Bill Epstein
Messages: 1088
Registered: May 2009
Location: Smoky Mts. USA
Illuminati (2nd Degree)
...the Clarinet Quintet on the "B" side is what I'll play over and over.



Re: I bought the Mozart Clarinet Concerto for Robert Marcellus, but... [message #7386 is a reply to message #7385] Wed, 14 February 2007 06:11 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Bob Brines is currently offline  Bob Brines
Messages: 186
Registered: May 2009
Location: Hot Springs Village, AR
Master
Ah, Yes. The clarinet concerto. This is Mozart's most mature concerto and one I think indicates the direction that he would have gone if he had lived another ten years.

Of course, this concerto was not written for the clarinet. It was written for the basset clarinet, a very rare instrument that didn't survive the turn of the century (1800). Indeed, there exists a complete piano sketch of the first movement for the even rarer basset horn in G. Mozart settled for the basset clarinet in A, most likely because the targeted performer, Anton Stadler was touring with this instrument. The basset clarinet goes down to written C instead of the normal E, sounding A. What this means is that all of those low arpeggios that sound contrived on a normal clarinet because of the forced inversions suddenly sound natural and correct when played on the basset clarinet.

LeBlanc currently catalogs a basset clarinet, which is their normal professional instrument with an extended foot joint. A few touring pros, Sabine Meyer, for one, have made recordings with this instrument, but the recording that you want to get is the old Christopher Hogwood / Anthony Pay versions, still available on Decca. Pay plays a replica of Stadler's instrument, and the results are astounding.

While the concerto is a cerebral and learned, the quintet is just plain fun. The final theme and variations is my favorite. Incidentally, the quintet was also written for Stadler's basset clarinet, but I have never heard a recording on this instrument.

Bob


Re: Great 'liner notes' Bob [message #7399 is a reply to message #7386] Thu, 15 February 2007 16:17 Go to previous message
Bill Epstein is currently offline  Bill Epstein
Messages: 1088
Registered: May 2009
Location: Smoky Mts. USA
Illuminati (2nd Degree)
'ppreciate it. Now I have to find the Hogwood. Really love the Clarinet on vinyl

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