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Sunday, August 11, 2024

Heitor Villa-Lobos - Music for Flute (William Bennett and Friends)


Information

Composer: Heitor Villa-Lobos
  1. Quinteto em forma de chôros
  2. Modinha
  3. Bachianas Brasileiras No. 6: Aria (Chôro): Largo
  4. Bachianas Brasileiras No. 6: Fantasia: Allegro
  5. Distribuiçăo de flôres (Distribution of flowers)
  6. Assobio a Jato (The Jet Whistle): Allegro non troppo
  7. Assobio a Jato (The Jet Whistle): Adagio
  8. Assobio a Jato (The Jet Whistle): Vivo
  9. Chôros No. 2
  10. Cançăo do Amor (Song of Love)
  11. Trio: Animé
  12. Trio: Languisamente
  13. Trio: Vivo

William Bennett, flute
Neil Black, oboe
Janice Knight, cor anglais
Thea King, clarinet
Robin O'Neill, bassoon
Charles Tunnell, cello
Simon Wynberg, guitar

Date: 1987
Label: Hyperion

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Review

Not only is William Bennett one of the finest flautists of the present day, but the friends he has gathered round him for this disc include some of our leading chamber-music soloists, and together they present first-class performances of some of Villa-Lobos's wind compositions. Pride of place must go to the Quintet, a quirkily entertaining and highly complex multi-sectional work that is superbly played—marvellously neatly, light-hearted in spirit, and with perfect internal balance and subtle tonal gradations. It is given in the original instrumentation for woodwind instruments only, an infinitely more satisfactory combination than the alternative, which replaces the cor anglais by the horn (adopted by the Brazilian team on Chant du Monde and, back in 1965, by a New York ensemble on a Nonesuch LP—nla), thereby distorting the tonal proportions and necessitating some tampering with the other parts. The only work here in which Bennett himself does not appear is the Trio, which, unless I am mistaken, has not been represented in a UK issue since a Nixa LP 34 years ago. It is a spiky, atonal piece, depending almost entirely (since there are no melodic themes) on twitching rhythms that thrust energetically against each other: it's exhilarating in a heartless kind of way, and typical of its period (1921), if not the kind of music to win new friends except those who can admire instrumental virtuosity.

All the other items here are duets for flute and one other instrument. The longest and latest (1950) is the curious Assobio a jato (''The jet whistle''), in which Bennett, admirably supported by Charles Tunnell, indulges in finelyjudged rubatos in the first movement, shows off his low register in the pensive Adagio, and revels in the huge upward skirls of the finale. Of more musical significance, perhaps, is the Bachianas brasileiras No. 6, sensitively shaped and shaded by both artists their French rivals on EMI unfortunately blot their copy-book by getting out from each other 15 bars before the end. Villa-Lobos clearly delighted in setting up elaborately conflicting rhythms, a trait seen again in the Choros No. 2, which starts with quasi-humorous syncopations but whose two voices rapidly develop a sturdy independence that takes players of uncommon brilliance and mutual responsiveness to fuse into a whole—which is the case here. The subtlety of tonal nuances exemplified far outshines that shown by the Brazilian pair on Chant du Monde.

And finally there are three trifles for flute and guitar, of which the chief is the Distribution of flowers. In its hieratically-poised stillness, Turibio Santos was far too assertive instead of being content to accompany his flautist: that mistake is not made in this performance, which is full of delicate gradations of tone. The ending, on the edge of sound, is breath-taking in its effect.

-- Lionel Salter, Gramophone

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Heitor Villa-Lobos (March 5, 1887 – November 17, 1959) was a Brazilian composer, conductor, cellist, and classical guitarist. Described as "the single most significant creative figure in 20th-century Brazilian art music", Villa-Lobos has become the best-known South American composer of all time. A prolific composer, he wrote numerous orchestral, chamber, instrumental and vocal works, totaling over 2,000 works by his death in 1959. His music was influenced by both Brazilian folk music and stylistic elements from the European classical tradition, and is well represented on the world's recital and concert stages and on compact disc.

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William Bennett (7 February 1936 – 11 May 2022) was a British flautist and teacher. His teachers included Geoffrey Gilbert, Fernand Caratgé, Jean-Pierre Rampal and Marcel Moyse. Bennett was principal flute of the BBC Northern Orchestra (now the BBC Philharmonic), and also played and recorded with major British orchestras and chamber music ensembles. He made more than 100 recordings, and premiered many flute concertos written for him. Bennett taught at the Hochschule für Musik Freiburg in Germany and the Royal Academy of Music in London, as well as held master classes worldwide.

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2 comments:

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  2. Hello, Ronald Do! How are you?

    I have some very rare Brazilian chamber music CDs. Records that have barely circulated in Brazil.

    Are you interested? If so, how can I contact you? I would not like to discuss this subject in the comments.

    A big hug from Brazil!

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