This is a release that will be of interest 
                  on several fronts. Firstly it resurrects what is claimed to 
                  be three premiere recordings – a quartet by Boccherini, the 
                  three Minuets by Puccini and an arrangement of a posthumous 
                  work by Ysaye, his Paganini Variations. Secondly it showcases 
                  the quartet organised by the much-admired violinist Lola Bobesco. 
                  Romanian born Bobesco (née Violeta Bobescu) won the Prix 
                  d’excellence at the Paris Conservatoire in 1935 and has been 
                  based for much of her professional life in Belgium. The Quatuor 
                  Arte del Suono was founded in 1991 with fellow professors at 
                  Belgium’s Royal Academies and this recording dates from 1994. 
                  And thirdly the music itself is never without interest.
                
                The Boccherini is a charming four-movement 
                  work that begins with an andante in the classical manner both 
                  portentous and affecting. In the succeeding Allegretto the first 
                  and second violins take turns leading, enjoying the harmonic 
                  excursions the composer provides for them. The third movement, 
                  most oddly, is "come prima" – that is, a repeat of 
                  the opening andante with minimal differences, notably a two 
                  bar descent in flats. The finale is the movement that has given 
                  the quartet its nickname – Cornemuses or bagpipes. Humorous, 
                  scurrying, with a securely anchored cello, the imitation bagpipes 
                  drone in slow tempo <sample 1> adding colour and density 
                  as well as pleasurable absurdity to the work. One of Boccherini’s 
                  clever fake endings brings to a conclusion a charmingly amiable 
                  work. Donizetti wrote seventeen quartets and No. 13 is an unsullied 
                  and attractively slight work in A major. It has a graceful and 
                  tuneful first movement with perhaps rather too much unison writing 
                  for its own good. In the second, introduced by the second violin, 
                  affecting and unclouded lyricism prevails whilst the notable 
                  feature of the Minuet is the clever delayed entry of the single 
                  voices one after the other. Lyrico-dramatic impulse drives the 
                  finale with virtuosic duetting between violins and charmingly 
                  songful. 
                
                Puccini’s Crisantemi was written in memory 
                  of the Duke of Aosta in 1890. It opens harmonically and thematically 
                  in questing spirit, is multi-sectional within its six minute 
                  span and affectingly vocal and plangent <sample 2> without 
                  resorting to bathos. The three Minuetti are pleasant, antique 
                  trifles. After Eugene Ysaye’s death in 1931 the manuscript of 
                  the Paganini Variations for violin and piano was discovered. 
                  It was subsequently adapted for quartet by Ysaye’s grandson, 
                  Jacques, expressly for the Quatuor Arte del Suono. It’s a theme 
                  and thirteen variations on the famous 24th Caprice 
                  - not top drawer Ysaye and the adaptation inevitably thins the 
                  virtuoso line; nevertheless there is still plenty of virtuoso 
                  rhetoric to enjoy. At one point it is distinctly reminiscent 
                  of another adaptation, the Halvorsen-Handel Passacaglia <sample 
                  3> and there is much scurrying up and down the fingerboard, 
                  imitative violin trilling, a delightful all pizzicato passage 
                  and some relaxed lyrical writing. 
                
                The Alberni Quartet has recorded the Donizetti 
                  Quartet and the Puccini Crisantemi on CRD 3366 but, primus inter 
                  pares or not, Bobesco and her talented colleagues have given 
                  us a well-considered and affectionate disc.
                
                Jonathan Woolf