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            Fiori Rossiniani  
              Iwan MÜLLER (1786-1854)   
              3 Fantasien, op.27 [18:47]  
              Ernesto CAVALLINI (1807-1874)  
               
              Fiori Rossiniani (Capriccio) [10:53]  
              Una Lacrima sulla Tomba dell'Immortale Rossini [4:53]  
              Stefano GOLINELLI (1818-1891)  
               
              2 Morceaux de Salon, op.124 [8:00]  
              Domenico LIVERANI (1805-1876)  
               
              2 Chants Religieux du 'Stabat Mater' di G. Rossini [12:44]  
              Gioacchino ROSSINI (1792-1868)  
               
              Sonata no.3, for strings (clarinet), arr. Yona ETTLINGER 
              (1924-1981) [12:38]  
              Fantaisie, for clarinet and piano (1829) [8:54]  
                
              Alessandro Travaglini (clarinet)  
              Christopher Howell (piano)  
              rec. Studio l'Eremo, Lessona, Italy, March 2010. DDD  
                
              SHEVA COLLECTION 029 [77:27]   
            Liner Notes 
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                  Italian label Sheva certainly keep Christopher Howell busy: 
                  in March 2010, while he was recording this chamber disc with 
                  Alessandro Travaglini, he was also in the studio recording some 
                  of Charles Stanford's Irish folksong arrangements with flautist 
                  Gilberto Fornito (see review) 
                  and in a nearby church performing Samuel Wesley's organ music 
                  (review). 
                   
                     
                  Sheva's production values came in for some sharp criticism in 
                  the latter of those reviews and elsewhere, but this recording 
                  thankfully gives relatively little cause for complaint. Sheva's 
                  producers' inexplicable tendency to chop off still resonating 
                  sound at the ends of tracks is still an issue on this release, 
                  but is rarely exasperating and does not affect every piece. 
                  True, there is an inconspicuous editing join about halfway through 
                  track three, and a more obvious one almost at the end of track 
                  four. There is, moreover, a more serious quality control issue 
                  at the end of the slow movement of the arrangement of Rossini's 
                  Sonata no.3, but generally speaking the listener is able to 
                  focus on - and unavoidably enjoy - this warm-hearted, clarinet-based 
                  tribute to Rossini by his contemporaries, who give some of the 
                  Italian master's great opera and, yes, choral tunes a charming 
                  and sometimes cheeky makeover.  
                     
                  The programme is rounded out with a recent arrangement of Rossini's 
                  Third Sonata for Strings, followed by his only Clarinet Sonata, 
                  a short but sweet four-movement work which he preferred to label 
                  a Fantaisie on account of the structural liberties it takes. 
                  Rossini's writing is so witty, so mouth-wateringly dazzling, 
                  this piece ought to finish off every clarinet recital by law. 
                   
                     
                  Alessandro Travaglini gives a commendable, sparkling performance, 
                  particularly in the two virtuosic pieces by Cavallini, one of 
                  which, Fiori Rossiniani ('Rossinian Flowers'), is a harum-scarum 
                  farrago of Rossini melodies that deservedly gives its name to 
                  the CD. But best of all is Liverani's warm but outrageous skinning 
                  of Rossini's Stabat Mater, in which Travaglini does justice 
                  to the music of a clarinet master greatly admired by Rossini 
                  himself. Travaglini is very ably and always enthusiastically 
                  accompanied throughout by Christopher Howell.  
                     
                  The booklet notes are brief but adequate, written with affection 
                  by Howell, and the biographical notes ample. The track listing 
                  on the back cover of the disc is the only one there is, but 
                  gives enough detail. With a generous overall timing, this disc 
                  adds up to a fairly appealing package, most obviously for clarinet 
                  fans, marked down only for the handful of production lapses 
                  which, surely, Sheva will soon put right.  
                     
                  Byzantion  
                  Collected reviews and contact at reviews.gramma.co.uk 
                   
                     
                 
				
                                                                   
                  
                 
                 
                
               
             
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