We 
                      tend to think of Boccherini primarily in terms of the many 
                      productive years he spent in Spain, and of the marvellous 
                      music he wrote there. But here is some gorgeous music written 
                      almost ten years before the move to Madrid, written when 
                      Boccherini was still a teenager. During the early years 
                      of the 1760s the young Boccherini was seeking musical employment 
                      in Vienna and in his native Lucca. He was already composing, 
                      and this set of duets was the product of these years of 
                      travel and aspiration. Later in the decade, Boccherini and 
                      the violinist Filippo Manfredi became something of a ‘hit’ 
                      in Paris, notably after a public concert in 1768. The duets 
                      were published in Paris the following year, in part, no 
                      doubt, because of Boccherini’s new found popularity and 
                      fame.
                    The 
                      repertoire for unaccompanied violin duet is not enormous, 
                      at least not if one discounts pieces written for amateurs 
                      and beginners. Even so, any list would include work by, 
                      for example, Stamitz, Haydn, Pleyel, Spohr, Moszkowski, 
                      Wieniawski, Bartók, Prokofiev, Shostakovich. These six duets 
                      by the youthful Boccherini deserve a high place amongst 
                      such company. All six are in three movements. Except for 
                      the first and fourth duets, the format is a slow movement 
                      framed by two quicker ones. The first duet has the sequence 
                      grazioso-allegro-presto; the fourth that of moderato-largo-allegro. 
                    Ezra 
                      Pound, in his ABC of Reading (1951) observes that 
                      “Music rots when it gets too far from the 
                      dance. Poetry atrophies when it gets too far from music”. 
                      Boccherini’s music is never too far from the dance, 
                      never in danger of atrophying. It is worth remembering that 
                      Boccherini’s family connections included not only his double-bass 
                      playing father, but a sister, Maria Ester, who was a prima 
                      ballerina of European reputation. Only four of the movements 
                      in these duets carry the name of a dance – the second, third, 
                      fifth and sixth all end with a movement marked either tempo 
                      di menuetto or minuetto - but the rhythms of the dance, 
                      however hushed, are never very far away. This is true even 
                      of the slow and exquisite grazioso which opens the first 
                      duet and the cantabile adagios of the fifth and sixth. Listening 
                      to the faster movements is a positive invitation to dance! 
                      
                    Boccherini 
                      creates fascinating passages of interplay between the two 
                      violins. For the most part the second violin is restricted 
                      to the role of accompaniment – though never without striking 
                      touches and unexpected details – but at other times, as 
                      in the last movement of the second duet, there is more sense 
                      of a dialogue of equals. Marco Rogliano (who, I presume, 
                      plays first violin) and Gianfranco Iannetta are very persuasive 
                      advocates for this music. They play with sensitivity, secure 
                      tone and intelligence of phrasing. 
                    This 
                      is wonderfully intimate music, ideal for home listening, 
                      given its smallness of scale on the one hand and its substantial 
                      musical content on the other.
                    Glyn Pursglove