Reviews
GMCD 7280/81Padre
Soler Six Organ Quintets
PADRE ANTONIO SOLER
Six
Quintets for Organ & Strings
Paul
Parsons (organ)
Rasoumovsky String Quartet
Guild- 7280/1(CD)
No Reference Recording
Quick! When was the last time you heard
an organ quintet? That's right, a work scored for organ and string quartet.
Chances are good that you've never heard one unless you've already listened to
this premiere recording of six quintets composed by the ever-resourceful Padre
Antonio Soler. Like his better-known concertos for two organs, Soler's quintets
were composed with longstanding organ pupil Prince Gabriel (son of the Spanish
royal family) in mind, and they similarly feature many adventurous moments
beyond the already unorthodox setting. For instance, the number of movements
significantly varies from quintet to quintet--in number, length, and tempo.
Organist Paul Parsons' role here is equally irregular--at times he functions as
a soloist in a traditional concerto setting, though more often he performs as an
equal member of the ensemble.
Arguably the final and longest quintet,
No. 6 in C, is Soler's most ambitious and fascinating offering. After a
succession of five very diverse yet typically brief movements and a sixth
four-minute quartet with Parsons serving primarily in a continuo role, Soler
presents a nearly 22-minute Rondo with 12 variations, each scored for different
solo and instrumental combinations. Of the many inspired moments of this
imaginative finale, variations 2 (strings without cello), 8 (organ joined by
viola and cello in the second half), 10 (solo organ with chords in alternating
registers), and 11 (dialogue between the muted first violin and organ right
hand, with pizzicato strings) are most entertaining.
Guild's sound is very good, with
excellent balances between Parsons and the quartet. Christopher Wellington's
informative notes also feature an outline discussing the highlights of each
movement. Although the performances are consistently good, the Rasoumovsky
Quartet's intonation and tone quality are shaky at times. Much of this problem
may have to do with the group's relative inexperience performing on gut strings,
which they employ here for authenticity. However, in the context of their
overall achievement this is not a major drawback, and all fans of the
illustrious Padre should strongly consider acquiring this delightful set.
[10/21/2004]
--John Greene
Organists’ Rerview, May
2005, TT 78'57"+79'41" (two discs);
Antonio Soler
(c.1729-1783) Six Organ Quintets (suites for string quartet and obbligato
chamber organ), played by the Rasumovsky String Quartet with Paul Parsons
(organ)
Soler is becoming
familiar to us as a composer in early classical style. His music has much
elegance which is brought out here in full measure. The combination of string
quartet and chamber organ is not commonly encountered. These six organ quintets
consist mainly of sonata-style movements, with an occasional minuet. They are
substantial in duration, each quintet being not far short of 30 minutes in
length. We have therefore about 2˝ hours of early classical music of great
elegance, sufficient for the most ardent admirers of the chamber music of this
period.
Quintet No 1 establishes
the early classical-lyrical style straight away. The string playing is most
persuasive in style, and this is an attractive feature of the whole recording.
The organ is essentially a chamber instrument with 8, 4 and 2ft stops, although
additional stops are listed in the description of the instrument. The limpid 8ft
"Stop Diapason" features to great effect throughout these recordings. The second
quintet introduces the regal stop. These quiet sounds feature throughout the
recording, at places prescribed by the composer.
The writing for these
instrumental resources is of the utmost variety and holds the listeners'
attention throughout. Quintet No 3 features a dialogue between organ and
strings, and it also includes an Allegro Pastorile. Quintet No 4 includes a
stately minuet and also a minuetto con variazione. In Quintet No 5 is to be
found a rustic minuetto, with lower drone string parts, also two duets, for
viola and cello and for the two violins. We note therefore a pleasing synthesis
of relatively formal movements of a kind commonly encountered in sonata-based
works, alternating with more easygoing material. Perhaps the sixth and last
quintet shows Soler at his most mature, with its long section for string
quartet, concluding with a rondo and 12 variations of no less than 20 minutes
duration. This may be viewed as a culmination of the whole set. The recorded
sound is very attractive, with a lively acoustic and with excellent balance
particularly between strings and organ.
The music itself relies
an repeated compositional habits to a considerable degree. There is much
sequential writing to an extent that one feels that the composer is relying an
"tried and tested" formulae very many times throughout the course of these
40-odd movements. The quintets must be regarded as somewhat lightweight, with an
elegance which suggests that "easy listening" was called for. However the music
is very far from easy to perform, and, in the context of the recordings under
review, the performers must be admired and thanked for their most musical
approach to this very considerable body of very pleasing material.Normara
Dyson
The Organ no. 329 – December 2004
PADRE
SOLER - SIX ORGAN QUINTETS
The Rasumovsky String Quartet - Paul Parsons, organ
Botharnsall Parish Church
GUILD GMCD 7280/1 - 2CDs 2hr 38'38"
www.guildrnusic.com - guildmusic@bluewin.ch
A
satisfying couple of CDs that show off Antonio Soler's flare for quick and
effective modulations as brought to light in his 1762 publication Llaves de la
modulacion. The six organ quintets are very engaging; the Rasumovsky String
Quartet and organist Paul Parsons exhibiting how flexible music for this
combination can be. These very pleasing performances are styled through
historically informed practices with the stringed instruments all dating from
the eighteenth century. The chamber organ is made by the latter day HIP organ
makers Goetze and Gwynn and dates from 2003, though, we are informed, it's
character 'has many things in common with an organ of the 1770s in Spain,’ much
around the time the quintets were written. However, the instrument is armed with
a transposing keyboard for pitches A392, A41S, A440 and A46S, cheating a little,
perhaps, our perception of such instruments of the time, but meeting the needs
of modern flexibility and economy. Further explanations are given in the very
informative booklet together with the organ's specification accompanied with
photographs of the instrument in situ at Bothamsall Parish Church where the
recording took place in 2003. A great CD for those interested in lesser-known
repertoire and highly recommended for any organ enthusiast.
DA
International Record Review – October 2004
Soler
Organ
Quintets Nos. 1-6.
Paul
Parsons
(organ); Rasumovsky String Quartet (Frances Mason, Gregory Warren Wilson,
violins; Christopher Wellington, viola; Christina Shillito, cello).
Guild
GMCD7280/1
(full
price, two discs, 2 hours 39 minutes). Played on the organ of Bothamsall Parish
Church. Website www.guildmusic.com. Producer/ Engineer Jonathan
Wearn. Dates September 30th - October 5th 2003.
Here
is something that certainly doesn't fit our normal generic expectations for
eighteenth-century chamber music. When Soler became organ tutor to Prince
Gabriel, son of Carlos III, in 1776, as well as writing six delightful duets for
two organs -which he was able to play with his pupil in a specially constructed
palace near the Escorial monastery -he also penned these six quintets for organ
and four solo strings. They do not exactly behave as chamber music in the
customary later eighteenth-century sense either. Given the relative lack of
compatibility between the constituent forces, Soler often alternates passages
for the organist and the string players, but he does this with considerable
resource so that one is not always aware of the basic antiphony. The excellent
commentary by violist Christopher Wellington quite rightly notes that the
composer seems to settle down into the unusual textural idiom from the Third
Quintet onwards. From this point one finds an impressive variety of approaches,
if still tending to operate through blocks of texture rather than featuring
absolute interchangeability of material. Several movements, for instance,
feature duets between organ and muted first violin while the other strings play
pizzicato, and in the final rondo of the Fifth Quintet two consecutive
episodes feature duets for viola and cello and then the two violins.
There
is also great variety of stylistic resource. This can be grasped just by
comparing the various types of minuet on offer, from the musette-like drones of
that in No.5 to the mellow cantabile found in that of No.6. In all but
one case the trios are actually called 'Quartetto' and mostly feature the four
strings alone. But we also find echoes of the Baroque concerto, idyllic
galant lyricism and even a fugue in the first work. For me the most
rewarding works are No.3 and, especially, No.6 in G minor. In its marvellous
first movement a sombre Andante for muted strings alternates twice with
quicker Allegro material for organ and strings without their mutes,
before all combine in a final Andante. The following Minuetto and even
more its central 'Quartetto' are quite captivating in their original sense of
gesture.
If
the quality and range of Soler's invention is memorable, what is less winning is
his control of larger- scale structure. Some movements (such as the Cantabile
con moto that opens Quintet No.2) seem interminably long, at least to this
modern ear .One might counter that this was music for private entertainment, but
the writing is not fine-grained enough to sustain interest through some of the
lengthier numbers. This also causes a difficulty for the string players. They
cannot really imagine themselves to be acting like a string quartet, given the
nature of their parts. Sometimes they in fact function as a small orchestra, or
a tutti in a concerto, yet on the other hand there are movements where the
writing is highly differentiated, and all four parts have many moments in the
spotlight, but it is not the kind of integrated writing that one finds, for
example, in the string chamber music of Boccherini.
This
uncertainty can be felt both in the recording - which has to be more widely
spread than one would normally hear for a string quartet in order to accommodate
the organ -and in the playing. Too often what one hears is a rather all-purpose
approach from the strings, not really taking a great deal of trouble to blend
and lacking some punctiliousness, for instance in the fashioning of cadence
points. And execution is often untidy or laboured. Paul Parsons is neater than
this, although he does have a tendency to swallow quicker note values and not
allow enough space around phrases. Further, there are a considerable number of
errors that should not have made it past the editing process - in the first
movement of No.2, for example, there are moments to forget at 0'30", 1'43" and
2'59". Altogether there is a degree of interpretative stiffness in these
performances which suggests that more time was needed to get inside the music
and weight it more finely. While enjoyment is conveyed at many points (the
finale of No.3, the Minuets of No.4), too often elsewhere this seems like an
underachieving presentation of some refreshingly different music.
W. Dean Sutcliffe

Page revised 26.04.2007
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