Listening to solo woodwind instrument is in many ways similar
to listening to the human voice. We can listen for pure beauty
of tone if we wish but this on its own rapidly becomes dull
unless there is also some individuality of phrasing and line.
Only then can real musical communication take place with the
listener. I have heard too many players (and singers) with enviable
tone and technique whose performances nonetheless are essentially
a nullity when it comes to communication. There have been however
a number of great oboists in whose hands the instrument speaks
with astonishing eloquence. For me one of the greatest is Heinz
Holliger, whose tone and technique are beyond praise but whose
greatest asset is his ability to characterise the music he plays
and thereby to communicate directly with the listener.
Heinz Holliger was born in 1939 in Langenthal in Switzerland.
As well as oboe, he studied piano and composition (with Boulez)
although he is unfortunately not represented in this set as
a composer. Also absent are any of the major compositions he
has inspired from others which utilise his ability to make use
of “extended techniques” on the oboe. What Brilliant have done
is simply to put together a series of his recordings from 1966
to 1991 of more conventional oboe music. These range from Albinoni
and Vivaldi to Martinu and Honegger. In no way does it give
a balanced view of the oboe repertoire but it does include many
real gems.
To start with the best. In the two discs devoted to the music
of Mozart the phrasing, the interaction between players and
the sheer joy in the music are all near ideal. Seldom since
the wonderful Leon Goossens version has a performance of the
Oboe Quartet had quite as much sheer wit and character. The
Sinfonia Concertante for wind is included in the reconstruction
by Robert Levin for flute, oboe, horn and bassoon rather than
in the version usually played today for oboe, clarinet, bassoon
and horn. The former is much more effective, especially as played
here. The Divertimento K251 is a rare pleasure, but is also
exceptionally enjoyable, especially when played with solo strings
as it is here.
Discs 6 and 9 include - as well as the rather dull Concerto
attributed to Haydn - a series of shorter works by such composers
as Donizetti, Bellini, Moscheles and Hummel. These are essentially
display pieces but are played here with a real understanding
of their similarity to the vocal music of the period and of
the opportunities this gives to the soloist to show off every
possible bel canto effect. These discs also include an
interesting Konzertstück by Julius Rietz, Sullivan’s composition
teacher in Leipzig, and a Concerto by Josef Fiala which once
again suggests that he was one of the dullest composers of the
period. Arthur Benjamin’s wonderfully adept Concerto based on
music by Cimarosa is given a particularly magical performance.
The last disc is devoted to music of the mid-twentieth century
– Martin, Honegger and Martinu. This is full of surprisingly
varied delights, although I could not help regretting the absence
of by far the greatest oboe Concerto of that period, that of
Richard Strauss. Holliger certainly recorded it and it would
have fitted in well here.
The first five discs are devoted to music of the eighteenth
century, one each for Vivaldi and Telemann and three for Albinoni.
The Telemann disc is the real winner here - each of the five
Concertos (four of them in minor keys) full of invention and
played with real imagination and passion. The Vivaldi is also
worth hearing, especially the double Concerto with bassoon (Klaus
Thunemann) although I Musici, now in the context of modern period
instrument groups, seem to play dully, heavily and without any
especial insight. This is even more marked on the Albinoni discs
which I found frankly dull. Worse still four of the Op. 7 Concertos
are for strings alone, meaning that there is not even Holliger’s
artistry to keep the listener’s interest alive. Whilst these
discs might do for background listening I found it increasingly
hard to pay real detailed attention to them.
Despite this, there is more than enough here to make this an
unmissable bargain overall. As if the musical content were not
enough, Brilliant have provided a 19 page essay by Susan Wynne
Roberts and Ates Orga which gives admirable notes on the soloist
and the music – a model of how such reissues should be presented.
Taken as a whole this is a worthy tribute to a great oboist
who is – above all – a great musician.
John Sheppard
Full contents list
(all with Heinz Holliger, oboe and cor anglais)
CD 1
Antonio VIVALDI (1678-1741)
Concerto in C RV452 [6:23]; Concerto in D minor RV454 [8:17];
Concerto in G RV545 [10:03]; Concerto in C RV446 [8:48]; Concerto
in A minor RV463 [9:31]; Concerto in C RV447 [14:33]
Klaus Thunemann (bassoon) (RV545): I Musici; recorded in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland in July 1975 and August 1981
CD 2
Georg Philipp TELEMANN (1681-1767)
Concerto in E minor [11:24]; Concerto in D minor [8:43]; Concerto
in C minor [9:15]; Concerto in F minor [7:37]; Concerto in D
[8:42]
Academy of St Martin in the Fields; Iona Brown (director): recorded in London in November 1981
CDs 3-4
Tomaso ALBINONI (1671-1751)
Concertos Op 7 No 1 in D [3:56]; No 2 in C [4:29]; No 3 in B
flat [8:00]; No 4 in G [7:22]; No 5 in C [4:56]; No 6 in D [7:15];
No 7 in A [5:07]; No 8 in D [6:00]; No 9 in F [6:09]; No 10
in B flat [5:59]; No 11 in C [6:41]; No 12 in C [8:08]; Sonatas
a cinque Op 2 No 5 in D [8:20]; No 6 in G minor [7:29]
Maurice Bourgue (oboe); I Musici: recorded in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland 1990-1991
CD 5
Concertos Op 9 No 2 in D minor [12:22]; No 3 in C [11:52]; No 5 in C [10:23]; No 8 in G minor [11:02]; No 9 in C [11:02]; No 11 in B flat [11:38]
Maurice Bourgue (oboe); I Musici: recorded in Italy 1966-7
CD 6
Joseph HAYDN (1732-1809)
Oboe Concerto in C Hob.VIIg:C1 [22:48]; Arthur
BENJAMIN (1893-1960) Oboe Concerto in D minor on
themes by Domenico CIMAROSA
(1749-1801) [10:11]; Gaetano DONIZETTI
(1797-1848) Concertino for Cor Anglais [10:54]; Andante
sostenuto for oboe and harp [3:32]
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, David Zinman; Ursula Holliger (harp): recorded 1986-9
CDs 7-8
Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791) Oboe
Quartet in F k370[17:23]; Adagio in D K580a [5:48]; Divertimento
No 11 in D K251 [27:19]; Sinfonia Concertante in Eb K297b [28:22];
Oboe Concerto in C K314[19:44]
Orlando Quartet; Hermann Baumann, Michel Gasciarrino (horns); Henk Guldemond (double bass): recorded Enkhuizen, The Netherlands and elsewhere in 1984
CD 9
Vincenzo BELLINI (1801-1835)
Oboe Concerto in E flat [6:28]; Bernard
MOLIQUE (1802-1869) Oboe Concertino in G minor [14:49];
Ignaz MOSCHELES (1794-1870)
Concertante in G for flute and oboe [14:05]; Julius
RIETZ (1812-1877) Konzertstück in F minor
Op 33 [13:42]; Josef FIALA (1748-1816)
Concerto for cor anglais in E flat [11:13]; Johann
Nepomuk HUMMEL (1778-1837) Adagio, theme and variations
in F minor [14:37]
Aurèle Nicolet (flute); Radio-Symphonie-Orchester Frankfurt, Eliahu Inbal (conductor); English Chamber Orchestra, Raymond Leppard (conductor): recorded in London in November 1968 and in Germany in August 1975
CD 10
Frank MARTIN (1890-1974)
Trois Danses [17:06]; Petite complainte [3:58]; Pièce Brève
[2:20]; Arthur HONEGGER (1892-1955)
Concerto da camera [17:11]; Petite Suite [2:45]; Antigone [2:40];
Bohuslav MARTINU
(1890-1959) Oboe Concerto [17:20]
Ursula Holliger (harp); Aurèle Nicolet (flute); John Constable (piano); Academy of St Martin in the Fields; Sir Neville Marriner (conductor): recorded in St John’s, Smith Square, London in October 1991