I suppose Hoffmeister 
                is best known for his celebrated Viola 
                Concerto. But in his time he was as 
                well known for publishing as for composition 
                – his firm eventually transmuted into 
                C. F. Peters – though his prodigious 
                output was reflected in one hundred 
                quartets for flute and strings, a raft 
                of symphonic literature, long forgotten 
                stage works and the like. 
              
 
              
These Notturnos, quintets 
                for winds and strings, are genial and 
                well crafted works but cut from the 
                easy listening, divertimento or tafelmusik 
                cloth. Looking through my notes I see 
                the words "agreeable" and 
                "loquacious" cropping up time 
                and again and that will give you a fair 
                indication of the pitch of these five 
                works. Hoffmeister at least had the 
                entertaining idea to score for violin, 
                two violas and the winds or, in the 
                case of Nos. 4 and 5 to dispense with 
                the violin altogether. It gives a warm 
                and mellow sonority to the voicings. 
                First movements feature good running 
                string figuration (No.1 in B) and slow 
                movements tend to veer very much to 
                Andantes or even Allegrettos than the 
                stated Adagio (No.1 again and Nos. 2 
                and 6 share this characteristic lightness 
                of declamation). 
              
 
              
What he did possess 
                is a certain raffish grazioso element, 
                and it’s that that enlivens these quintets 
                and gives them some degree of personality 
                beyond the purely functional. The opening 
                of No.4 possesses it in abundance with 
                the oboe dancing over a warm string 
                cushion and the bassoon at the bottom 
                providing basic harmonic direction and 
                filling out the texture – pretty much 
                a safe description of most of these 
                works. Occasionally he will set a string 
                player free – as he does with the violin 
                in the slow movement of No.2, or he’ll 
                introduce a witty cadential passage 
                for the horn as in the Minuet of No.4. 
                It’s only in the slightly quizzical 
                harmonic implications of the opening 
                Adagio of the Divertimento-like No.5 
                that we can see Hoffmeister opening 
                up the pleasing detachment of these 
                works to explore other, more expressive 
                material. But it’s not for long. 
              
 
              
These are effortlessly 
                genial works, attractively played, and 
                warmly recorded. Quietly humorous and 
                Mannheim-Mozartian in stylistic affiliation 
                they make for exceptionally undemanding 
                listening – as was surely the intention. 
              
 
              
              
Jonathan Woolf