Mozart: Serenades & Divertimenti

17,50

2 CD 

Classical Music 

Australian Eloquence

23 February 2019

In stock

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Description

028948047222

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart:Concertone In C Major For Two Violins, Oboe And Cello, KV 190Divertimento In B-Flat Major, KV 137Divertimento In D Major, KV 136Divertimento In D Major, KV 334Divertimento In F Major, KV 138Notturno In D Major, KV 286Serenade No. 13 in G major, K525 'Eine kleine Nachtmusik'Serenata Notturna In D Major, KV 239

Artists

Academy of St. Martin in the Fields (Orchestra)Sir Neville Marriner (Conductor)

During the 18th century it was common for noblemen to employ numbers of musicians to entertain themselves and their guests, and to add dignity and colour to occasions of Church and State. Music was frequently written to form a pleasant background to dinners and parties. Serious or complex music would clearly have been inappropriate for gatherings of this kind; it was the task of the composer to amuse the guests without overstepping his function and distracting them from the more important business of eating, drinking and making merry.

In these circumstances much music was produced which deserved no more than to be talked through; but composers of the ability of Mozart and Haydn responded with light music of a higher quality. The titles Divertimento, Cassation, Serenade and Notturno all refer to pieces of this kind. Elements of the old dances – allemande, courante, sarabande and so on – had fallen from favour, but the minuet was used a good deal and the style gallant was much in evidence.

Neville Marriner and the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields’ recording of Mozart’s most popular serenade – the ubiquitous Eine kleine Nachtmusik – made for Argo in 1970 has never been out of the catalogue, but the other works on this compilation, equally compelling, magically performed, have not, as often, seen the light of day on CD. Such is the case with the brief issue in Decca’s ‘World Of…’ series of the extended Divertimento KV 334 and the haunting Notturno for four orchestras, deploying extraordinary echo effects. These are complemented on this anthology with the Serenata Notturna, the three early Divertimenti KV 136–138, and the little-known but breezy Concertone opening the collection.