‘Classic’ in the 
                  title of this CD needs to be understood as a reference to matters 
                  of style and form, rather than status. The CD can perhaps be 
                  seen as complementary to Leister and Bognár’s Romantic Sonatas 
                  (also on Camerata), which includes works by Mendelssohn, Rossini 
                  and Nielsen, amongst others. 
                
Certainly 
                  there is no music here which has achieved ‘classic’ status – 
                  or, indeed, is ever likely to. These are all decidedly minor 
                  pieces. That isn’t to say, however, that they are by any means 
                  without interest. It was really only at the very beginning of 
                  the nineteenth century that sonatas began to be written for 
                  the clarinet with any regularity. In the words of the booklet 
                  notes by John A. Phillips, “the four composers featured in the 
                  present recording, although occupying varying degrees of obscurity 
                  in the great panorama of music history, represent the first 
                  generation of composers willing to accord the clarinet a solo 
                  role”. As such, the very least that one can say for the CD is 
                  that it should be in every reference collection.
                Given, 
                  however, the quality of Karl Leister’s musicianship, this is 
                  a recital which can very definitely be listened to for pleasure, 
                  as well as for historical instruction. Leister was, for many 
                  years, principal clarinettist of the Berlin Philharmonic under 
                  Karajan; as a soloist he has played with conductors such as 
                  Karajan, Kubelik, Jochum and many others; as a chamber-musician 
                  he has worked with, to name but a few, the Berlin Soloists, 
                  the Amadeus Quartet, Christoph Eschenbach and Gidon Kremer. 
                  He has recorded for labels such as DG, Philips and Sony. This 
                  wealth of experience, his familiarity with all the pillars of 
                  the clarinet repertoire, is now brought to bear on these early 
                  works. For all that it might have been fascinating to hear one 
                  or two of these played on period instruments, Leister’s sense 
                  of where these pieces were to lead, what was later going to 
                  happen to music for the instrument, seems to give a particular 
                  quality to his interpretations. Ferenc Bognár is a sensitive 
                  and thoughtful partner throughout.
                Dupuy’s Introduction and Polonaise is a charming piece, played 
                  here with a very agreeable sense of conversational interplay 
                  between the two musicians. Inspiration seems to flag from time 
                  to time in the Grand Sonata by Bochsa (father of the 
                  more famous composer and harpist Nicholas Charles Bochsa). Vanhal’s 
                  Sonata, on the other hand, is a largely persuasive piece – even 
                  if its final rondo is a bit of an anticlimax - in which Leister’s 
                  control of the upper register is heard to particular advantage; 
                  the adagio has warmth and the performance has an air of spontaneity. 
                  Eberl was a friend of Mozart’s and it has not been unknown 
                  for works of his to be wrongly attributed to the great man. 
                  It is not surprising then that his sonata sometimes makes one 
                  think of Mozart – though it is also the one of these four works 
                  which seems most obviously to anticipate later romantic writing 
                  for the clarinet.
                Recommended 
                  to all with an interest in the clarinet repertoire.
                Glyn Pursglove