The Avison Ensemble continue to do proud the 
                  composer whose name they bear. Having recorded his Opp. 3 and 
                  4 (Naxos 8.557905-6 – see review) 
                  and Op.6 Concertos (Naxos 8.557553-4 – see Jonathan Woolf’s 
                  review 
                  and Johan van Veen’s review), 
                  Concerti after Geminiani (Divine Art DDA21210 – see review), 
                  the Op.9 and Op.10 Concerti Grossi (DDA21211) and his 
                  Concerti Grossi after D Scarlatti (DDA21213), they now 
                  turn their attention to the Op.1 Trio Sonatas and the Op.8 Keyboard 
                  Sonatas with accompaniments. I’m on record as offering high 
                  praise to DDA21211 – see review 
                  – and DDA21213 – see review 
                  – and Jonathan Woolf was also lavish in his praise for DDA21213 
                  – see review. 
                
You’ll also find an appreciation of their performances 
                  of the cello concertos of Avison’s contemporary, John Garth 
                  (DDA25059) in my October, 
                  2008, Download Roundup. All these Divine Art 2-CD sets are 
                  currently offered as 2-for-1 and are available as very acceptable 
                  320k mp3 downloads from theclassicalshop.net for £4.99 per CD. 
                  The two Naxos sets are available as downloads from classicsonline.com, 
                  also at 320k, for £9.98 per 2-CD set, and from other download 
                  sites at varying bit-rates. I can vouch personally for the quality 
                  of the Garth download from theclassicalshop and of the Op.6 
                  Concertos from classicsonline – in both cases, the downloads 
                  come with the CD booklet as a pdf document. 
                
The works on the new set may not reach quite 
                  the heights of the Concertos after Geminiani and Scarlatti – 
                  go for those two sets first – but they are by no means negligible: 
                  unfailingly tuneful and well-constructed. The Op.1 pieces may 
                  well have had their origin as exercises when Avison was being 
                  tutored by Geminiani; if so, they are the work of a very competent 
                  and inspired pupil, by no means a slavish imitator of his mentor. 
                  Even when he adapted the keyboard works of Geminiani and Scarlatti, 
                  Avison did much more than merely orchestrate their music, just 
                  as Geminiani had done in orchestrating the music of his own 
                  mentor, Corelli. 
                
The Op.1 Sonatas are advertised on their title 
                  page (reproduced in the well-documented Divine Art booklet) 
                  as ‘for two violins and a bass’. This makes them, in effect, 
                  Trio Sonatas in the manner of Corelli – indeed, they all follow 
                  the four-movement pattern of Corelli’s Sonate da chiesa, 
                  slow-fast-slow-fast, though it is unlikely that they were intended 
                  for church performance. The ‘bass’ is performed here on the 
                  cello and chest organ, making for a very full sound. I’m on 
                  record as preferring the cleaner sound of violin and harpsichord, 
                  without cello, in Corelli’s Op.5 Sonatas (Naxos 8.557799 – see 
                  review) 
                  but the fuller sound works well in Avison’s Op.1, making the 
                  music sound much closer to the Concerti Grossi on the Ensemble’s 
                  other recordings. 
                
The Op.1 Sonatas are in a form transmitted from 
                  Corelli via Geminiani. By the date of the Op.8 Sonatas, however, 
                  the music of Rameau was becoming influential in England and 
                  Avison specifically mentions ‘Scarlatti, Rameau and Carlo-Bach’ 
                  (i.e. CPE Bach) alongside Geminiani in his ‘Advertisement’ for 
                  the set. The notes in the booklet very reasonably speculate 
                  that Avison knew Rameau’s Pièces de clavecin en concerts: 
                  he certainly praises the French composer for his ‘spirited Science’. 
                  Once again, however, whatever the degree of Rameau’s influence, 
                  Avison is no slavish imitator. I hear the influence of Scarlatti 
                  and, perhaps, even a foretaste of Boccherini in Sonata No.3 
                  (trs.6-7). 
                
The title page of Op.8 (again, reproduced in 
                  the booklet) described the works as ‘for the harpsichord with 
                  accompanyments for two violins and a violoncello’ and he specified 
                  that the string parts ‘being intended for Assistants only ... 
                  ought no where to overpower the Harpsichord.’ This brings me 
                  to my one reservation concerning the new recording. Whatever 
                  Avison’s intentions – reinforced by the fact that the harpsichord 
                  part is capable of being performed alone – the ‘Assistant’ strings 
                  do sometimes prove intrusive on the recording. This may well 
                  be an inherent problem in the music itself rather than one to 
                  be laid at the door of the performers or the engineers. Without 
                  suggesting that multi-miking or other trickery should have been 
                  employed, I should have thought it possible for the harpsichord 
                  part to be brought out more fully on a recording. 
                
It’s a minor criticism and it didn’t spoil my 
                  enjoyment unduly. Otherwise I have nothing but praise for everything 
                  on these CDs. Music, performance and recording – preferably 
                  with a slight volume reduction from your normal setting – all 
                  contribute to a most enjoyable experience and the booklet is 
                  a model of its kind. As on the earlier recordings, there are 
                  no rough edges to the sound of the period instruments employed; 
                  this is early music without tears. I look forward now to the 
                  appearance of the Op.5 and Op.7 sonatas. 
                    
                  Brian Wilson