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Sergei Istomin, Apollo Ensemble, David Rabinovich: Joseph Haydn – Cello Concertos (FLAC)

Sergei Istomin, Apollo Ensemble, David Rabinovich: Joseph Haydn - Cello Concertos (FLAC)
Sergei Istomin, Apollo Ensemble, David Rabinovich: Joseph Haydn – Cello Concertos (FLAC)

Composer: Joseph Haydn
Performer: Sergei Istomin, Apollo Ensemble
Conductor: David Rabinovich
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Passacaille
Catalogue: PAS960
Release: 2010
Size: 303 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: cover

Cello Concero in C Major, Hob . VII b:1
01. Moderato
02. Adagio
03. Allegro molto

Cello Concerto in D Major, Hob. VII b:2
04. Allegro Moderato
05. Adagio
06. Allegro

Symphony No. 16 in B-Flat Major Hob. 1:16
07. Allegro
08. Andante
09. Presto

Sergei Istomin is much in demand throughout Europe and North America as soloist and chamber musician. His repertoire includes baroque, classical, romantic and contemporary music on both period and modern instruments. He regularly works with Anima Eterna Symphony Orchestra, Tafelmusik and other prominent groups. The Apollo Ensemble perform on period instruments.

This Belgian release features a Dutch authentic-instrument group, the Apollo Ensemble, with the Russian-born (and partly American- and Canadian-trained) cellist Sergei Istomin in a lively period performance of Haydn’s two cello concertos, with a rarely heard early symphony to round out the program. The most distinctive feature of the recording is the small size of the orchestra, with just two first violinists, two second violinists, and single players of the viola, cello, and double bass (along with oboes, horns, and bassoons, which you’d better believe stand out at this size). This is similar to but even smaller than the commonly reported size of Haydn’s orchestra at Esterháza castle (which probably had three players on each violin part), and it’s debatable whether this is the best way to go with Haydn. The fact that he worked with an orchestra of this size does not indicate that he necessarily preferred it, and indeed his music later in life was performed by much larger groups. Be this as it may, this is a strong example among recordings following the trend toward smaller groupings (which may, like so much of the U.S. medical establishment, be a case of practice following economics). The Apollo players cultivate a chamber-like interaction, with strong and varied emphasis on statement-and-answer passages. They’re nicely matched by Istomin, one of the few performers who has carved out careers with equal vitality on both the historical- and the modern-instrument sides. He digs into the low growl with which the Cello Concerto in C major, Hob. 7b/1, begins, and he brings a sense of excitement to the uncharacteristically virtuosic passages in both concertos. The small group does not suffer from any lack of momentum in the hell-for-leather development section in the C major concerto’s first movement. Strong graphic design, with novel views of Esterháza, is an attractive bonus for a disc that’s definitely of interest to those down with hardcore historical performances of Haydn. The booklet text is given in English, French, German, and Dutch.

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