Ignaz Joseph Pleyel, known mostly as an early piano manufacturer, was also Haydn's student, and briefly his rival in a musical competition trumped up during Haydn's visit to London in 1792. Most of the recordings of Pleyel's music that have appeared thus far merely confirm why the Londoners continued to play Haydn and forgot Pleyel, but these wind pieces, counterparts to Mozart's large wind serenades, are different. The parallel is indeed to Mozart rather than to Pleyel's teacher: the works are four-movement pieces with the ...
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Ignaz Joseph Pleyel, known mostly as an early piano manufacturer, was also Haydn's student, and briefly his rival in a musical competition trumped up during Haydn's visit to London in 1792. Most of the recordings of Pleyel's music that have appeared thus far merely confirm why the Londoners continued to play Haydn and forgot Pleyel, but these wind pieces, counterparts to Mozart's large wind serenades, are different. The parallel is indeed to Mozart rather than to Pleyel's teacher: the works are four-movement pieces with the dimensions and movement sequences (the slow movements tend to be Romances or romance-like) of string quartets, not true divertimenti or serenades. In fact, with two octets and two sextets represented here, the textures are more complex than those of Mozart's wind serenades even if Pleyel has nothing as emotionally compelling as Mozart's Serenade for winds in C minor, K. 388. These four pieces are full of delights from beginning to end. Sample the finale of the Octet in B flat major,...
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Add this copy of Consortium Classicum to cart. $21.45, new condition, Sold by Revaluation Books rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Exeter, DEVON, UNITED KINGDOM, published 2008 by MDG: MDG0460.