Mozart: Piano Concertos Nos. 15 & 16 / Rondo in D

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W. A. MOZART
Mozart: Piano Concertos Nos. 15 & 16 / Rondo in D
Ronald Brautigam (fortepiano) / Die Kölner Akademie, Michael Alexander Willens

[ BIS SACD / Hybrid SACD ]

Release Date: Friday 20 February 2015

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In May 1784, shortly after completing the two piano concertos recorded here, Mozart described them in a letter to his father as 'concertos which are bound to make the player sweat.' In his correspondence he also pointed out the particular importance of the wind instruments in the two works. This is obvious already in the first movement of the Concerto in D major, K 451, which opens the disc: for long stretches Mozart revels in the soloistic capabilities of the winds and elsewhere he builds up chordal textures in which the winds' distinctive colours dominate. In a similar manner, the winds take the lead from the very beginning of the B flat major concerto, K 450, with the strings answering. Throughout the movement, the woodwinds are absolutely vital to the narrative and Mozart playfully exploits the diverse colours of the winds, frequently featuring pairs of them playing in octaves: oboe/bassoon, oboe/horn or horn/bassoon. In the Andante the wind instruments are silent from start, but once they enter they again dominate in terms of colours. The delicacy of the piano writing throughout this movement adds to the very special quality of the concerto, in which Mozart seems to point the way towards Beethoven. Previous discs in this series have earned distinctions such as Editor's Choice (Gramophone), IRR Outstanding (International Record Review), '10' (klassik-heute.de) and Disco excepcional (Scherzo). On their eighth instalment, Ronald Brautigam and Die Kölner Akademie have chosen to close the programme with a Rondo in D major, originally intended as a replacement finale for the Piano Concerto No.5, K 175. Offering a range of different moods and introducing a variety of quasi-operatic characters, the Rondo became greatly popular in Vienna and beyond, and was in fact sometimes published as a stand-alone work.

"These performances are like hearing music cleaned of over two hundred years of varnish, if I can mix my similes. It is not only the use of smaller and quieter fortepianos that provide this clarity, it is also the small orchestra of just fourteen strings plus wind and timpani. Add to this the clarity of BIS hi-def recordings. John Irving's excellent notes discuss each work in detail. Brautigam's fortepiano is placed fairly close and one can hear that the treble notes come from further left than the bass showing it has been placed sideways on to the listener. The orchestra stretches right across the sound-stage and not a note is less than clear. The timpani have a nice impact, no muted thumping here. Everyone should hear this lovely issue." (MusicWeb April 2015)

"The series's central sources of strength remains Ronald Brautigam's muscular yet sensitively nuanced command of of Mozartian discourse in every aspect: for instance, his straightfoward accounts of both concerto Andantes both show strong personal insight and moments of tender poetry." (BBC Music Awards Issue 2015)

Tracks:

Piano Concerto No.15 in B flat major, K 450
Piano Concerto No.16 in D major, K 451
Rondo in D major for piano and orchestra, K 382