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 | Christian WESTERHOFF 
              (1763-1806) Clarinet Concerto in B flat, Op. 5 [18:50]
 Concerto for Clarinet, Bassoon, and Orchestra in B flat [22:14]
 Symphony in E flat [22:05]
 
  Sebastian Manz (clarinet); Albrecht Holder (bassoon) Osnabrück Symphony Orchestra/Hermann Bäumer
 rec. 17-22 May, 2010, Stadthalle Osnabrück, Germany
 
  CPO 777 598-2 [63:09] 
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                Really very little is known about Christian Westerhoff except 
                  that his music is wonderful. If you like the music of the late 
                  1700s, it will be of very great appeal; the clarinet concerto 
                  sparkles and the symphony is a charmer of serious craft for 
                  someone so little-known.
 
 Westerhoff was composing at the same time Beethoven got his 
                  start, but he lived in the patronage system more commonly associated 
                  with his predecessors, becoming concertmaster to the ensemble 
                  of a certain Princess Juliane von Schaumburg-Lippe. Very shortly 
                  before Westerhoff’s arrival, the position had been vacated 
                  by Johann Christoph Friedrich Bach. The job had an unfortunate 
                  tendency to see its occupants die young, and by the age of 42 
                  - or maybe 43; apparently we’re not sure - Westerhoff 
                  too was gone.
 
 Very few scores of his remain, including these three works, 
                  a flute concerto and a viola concerto. Of the pieces on this 
                  CD only the Clarinet Concerto Op 5 was ever published (1798), 
                  and its appeal would have been obvious: in just under twenty 
                  minutes, it wins us over with a refined pastoral mood and felicitous 
                  writing for the solo instrument. The clarinet enters immediately 
                  with the main theme and then bows out for the duration of the 
                  orchestral introduction, much like Beethoven’s Fourth 
                  Piano Concerto, which debuted almost a decade later. The finale 
                  is a theme and variations the ending of which is especially 
                  pleasing. The clarinet concerto is actually the inspiration 
                  for this CD: it was rediscovered by the celebrated soloist Dieter 
                  Klöcker, who died in 2011 leaving a legacy of acclaimed 
                  recordings on EMI, MDG, CPO, Marco Polo and other labels. Klöcker 
                  worked wonders for clarinet fans by enormously expanding our 
                  knowledge of classical- and romantic-era works; his passionate 
                  sleuthing for more great music is what revealed the Westerhoff 
                  concerto, which he then passed on to budding star Sebastian 
                  Manz. Manz composed a short but quite clever cadenza for this 
                  recording at Klöcker’s suggestion.
 
 The other two works are equally fine: a double concerto sees 
                  the clarinet and bassoon really treated as equals; I am quite 
                  impressed by Westerhoff’s willingness to give the bassoon 
                  big solos, lyrical lines, and virtuoso material, rather than 
                  treating it as the lesser of two partners. Unlike the clarinet 
                  concerto, this piece launches with a more substantial orchestral 
                  introduction. Otherwise the pieces are very similar: both in 
                  B flat, both with identical tempo markings, both notable for 
                  the substance and playfulness of their finales. The first movement 
                  does get a little too long for its material, but the soloists 
                  also have a lovely duet-cadenza. Westerhoff’s adagios 
                  aren’t much, but he knows it so he shifts the center of 
                  gravity to his clever endings; the double concerto finale features 
                  an intermittent orchestral line that recalls Haydn’s Bear 
                  symphony.
 
 Then we have the Symphony in E flat, for slightly expanded orchestra 
                  with timpani, which has a stately introduction before taking 
                  off the mask and launching into a whirling delight of a poco 
                  presto, featuring a bassoon solo and some writing for trumpets 
                  and horns which sounds a lot like the early Schubert 
                  symphonies. The finale is again a highlight, and again foreshadows 
                  early Schubert.
 
 The Osnabrück Symphony and Hermann Bäumer are at home 
                  in the music, delivering with great style. These are modern 
                  instruments, incidentally. Sebastian Manz repays the trust placed 
                  in him by Dieter Klöcker, and Albrecht Holder revels in 
                  the beefy bassoon part in the double concerto. With good sound 
                  and an unusually (for CPO) interesting booklet note containing 
                  Manz’s recollection of a conversation with Klöcker, 
                  this is an easy choice for anybody who likes music from the 
                  late classical era.
 
 Brian Reinhart
 
 
      
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