This well-planned programme 
                of known, half-known and unknown18th 
                century music - the sort of thing Naxos 
                does so well - squeezes two welcome 
                rarities between much more familiar 
                Mozart pieces. 
              
 
              
The best known here 
                is the wholly delightful Oboe Quartet 
                in F, K370 - a fun-piece if ever there 
                was one, despite venturing briefly into 
                the minor-key shade in its beautiful 
                slow movement. 
              
 
              
The Crusell Divertimento 
                (scored for the same combination as 
                both K370 and Bach) dates from 1822. 
                It’s more of a concerto piece than the 
                rest of the disc, requiring a virtuosic 
                almost operatic personality from the 
                soloist. Don’t underestimate it before 
                you hear it! It’s beautifully crafted, 
                and - as you might expect from an albeit 
                minor contemporary of Weber, Schubert 
                and Bellini - there’s an abundance of 
                early-Romantic colouring, despite its 
                obviously-Classical roots. Every commonplace 
                idea is balanced by an agreeable surprise. 
              
 
              
The London Bach’s two-movement 
                Quartet is elegant and diverting, as 
                almost always, but pretty lightweight. 
              
 
              
Most of us will find 
                the so-called ‘Oboe Quintet’ - the most 
                substantial item, however you measure 
                substance - the most interesting. I 
                was referring to this piece when I spoke 
                of ‘half-known’ Mozart in my introduction. 
                No mere curiosity, this is in fact the 
                same piece as the Serenade in C minor 
                (dating from 1782) for two oboes, two 
                clarinets, two horns and two bassoons, 
                which Mozart himself arranged and published 
                five or six years later as the String 
                Quintet in C minor. Its appearance here 
                in an uncredited arrangement for oboe 
                and string quartet is, if I may be forgiven 
                for using the word, wholly ‘viable’. 
                Doubly so, because it uses two violas 
                instead of two violins (like the Horn 
                Quintet, K407 - an admirable precedent) 
                in order better to preserve the scoring 
                of contrasted pairs inherent in both 
                of Mozart’s versions. Of course an Oboe 
                Quintet thus constituted manages to 
                be a near-perfect compromise between 
                the sound worlds of Wind Octet and String 
                Quintet. Unauthentic though it may be 
                it has no problem justifying itself. 
                One can hardly object to the preponderance 
                of the solo oboe, either, as this is 
                an undoubted characteristic of the original 
                Serenade, testing as it does the stamina 
                of even the most experienced players. 
                Only in the extraordinary inverted double 
                counterpoint of the Menuetto in canone 
                does one miss the integrity of Mozart’s 
                first or second scoring - that’s impossible 
                to sustain with this combination of 
                instruments. Actually, the Serenade 
                is no such thing: no serenade, I mean. 
                It’s a powerfully-argued, dark-hued 
                piece, typical of so much mature minor-key 
                Mozart, with an intensity and seriousness 
                of purpose light worlds away from the 
                divertissement implied by its original 
                title. 
              
 
              
Max Artved is principal 
                oboe with the Danish Radio Symphony 
                Orchestra, and his colleagues on this 
                disc are fellow players in the same 
                ensemble. They are well-honed musicians, 
                both individually and collectively: 
                the urgency and unity of their playing 
                in the C minor Serenade-Quintet is most 
                compelling. You may, like me, occasionally 
                wish for fractionally more spacious 
                tempi, if only to give more time for 
                phrases to breathe? Artved himself plays 
                divinely, with a seductively beautiful 
                tone, an impeccable sense of style, 
                and wonderfully precise articulation. 
                The two perfectly-focused top Fs in 
                the Mozart Quartet bring an irresistible 
                smile of admiration and satisfaction: 
                this really is top-drawer oboe-playing, 
                deserving of the most lavish praise! 
              
 
              
Unsurprisingly, the 
                sound, originating with Danish Radio, 
                is outstanding, and the liner notes 
                informative. Go buy yet another Naxos! 
                
                
                Peter J Lawson 
              
see also review 
                by Patrick Waller