The Copland gets the most striking performance here. Hosford's effective 
                  rethinking points up the extent to which most other renditions 
                  of this score, a relatively recent addition to the repertoire, 
                  already conform to a standard interpretive paradigm. 
                
At the outset, for example, most clarinetists, seduced perhaps by the 
                  open, clear textures and harmonies, lapse into a sort of dreamy 
                  fuzziness. Hosford, with gentle attacks, places each note of 
                  these phrases precisely and rhythmically; the result is more 
                  assertive, even plaintive, with the clarinet tone taking on 
                  a sharp edge as it climbs above the stave. The violins' wistful 
                  poise at 4:23 turns the theme into a French waltz, not inappropriately 
                  given the composer's Boulanger training in Paris. As the clarinet 
                  writing de-evolves into shorter bursts of notes at 7:03, Hosford 
                  inflects each segment so as to lead on to the next - a logical 
                  subtlety, but one frequently missed. The passage beginning at 
                  9:16 - which I think of as jazzy, though it's barely syncopated 
                  - with strongly marked rhythms, hints at some weight. The phrases 
                  at 9:53 and again at 13:04 infuse the basic motor impulse with 
                  a waltzy buoyancy. The closing sections are conventional in 
                  spirit, but go nonetheless with energy and zest. 
                
The Mozart is the same performance I reviewed, and enjoyed, as part 
                  of an all-Mozart program (COE Records CD COE 814). Revisiting 
                  it, I was further impressed by the overall sheen of the orchestral 
                  textures, and by Hosford's nuanced shading of the Adagio's 
                  long melodic phrases. 
                
The Duett-Concertino, Strauss's own peculiar take on the sinfonia 
                  concertante format, doesn't quite come off here. The opening 
                  tempo is misjudged - it flows nicely, but could use more space 
                  and serenity - and, in the first two movements, Matthew Wilkie's 
                  unduly reticent bassoon throws off the interplay between the 
                  two soloists. In the finale, Wilkie achieves a better parity 
                  with Hosford, and this movement, at least, sounds cheerful and 
                  appealing. 
                
              
Thierry Fischer's name appears on COE's booklet and endpaper, but not 
                on the disc itself, nor is there any indication as to which piece(s) 
                he might have conducted. We already know from COE 814 that Schneider 
                conducts the Mozart; on the other hand, that release doesn't indicate 
                the recording venue, here identified as Barking Assembly Hall.
                
                Stephen Francis Vasta