Comparison Recordings:
Mozart Symphony #34,
etc. Bamert, LMP, BBC magazine Vol.
IV #6.
Myslivecek wrote these
symphonies (or "overtures")
in Italy whilst Mozart was in his mid-teens.
Mozart knew the composer personally
at that time. It is often said of a
particular work that it was written
at the same time as another, but with
no proof that the composers had ever
heard of each other or each other’s
music, let alone met, until much later;
the speculations about influence can
be insupportable. But when these symphonies
truly do sound like works Mozart was
writing at the time, then we can with
some cause propose explanations as to
why the music sounds similar. Mozart
was a student all his life, of course,
and had no embarrassment about appropriating
stylistic elements from others, just
as he had neither necessity nor inclination
to use them without stamping them unmistakably
with his own personality.
If this disk were labelled
"Mozart Symphonies," after
listening you would not be likely to
challenge that ascription; if you lament
that Mozart wrote little music in his
youth, be cheered for here is some more.
The works, published as "overtures",
are in three movements, The performances
leave nothing to be desired, the London
Mozart Players with Mathias Bamert having
established a reputation for the finest
performances of this repertoire in excellent
sound. Listen, for example, to the comparison
recording listed above - easily the
best version of that work I’ve ever
heard.
We do hear gracious
tunes, melodic phrases dramatically
developed, rich colourful orchestration.
But, knowing that this is not Mozart,
I listened carefully, and with mounting
frustration, for some turn of phrase,
some stylistic element which I could
say was noticeably, definitely inferior
to Mozart. I never found one. If it
is important to you to believe that
Mozart was light years ahead of every
other composer alive at his time, perhaps
you should not listen to this disk.
Paul Shoemaker