The London Sinfonietta is renowned across the world as one of the most adventurous groups commissioning and performing new music. From its inception, however, the Sinfonietta played the classics alongside new and avant-garde pieces, and this new Eloquence set traces the engagement of the group with the Viennese tradition.
At the centre of the set is the 5-LP survey of Schoenberg’s chamber music – from the early and Wagnerian Verklärte Nacht to the late Phantasy for violin and piano – which the Sinfonietta recorded in 1973-4 to mark the centenary of the composer’s birth. The recordings were bedded in by extensive performing experience, in a comprehensive concert series celebrating the music of Schoenberg and his Catalan student, Roberto Gerhard.
The Sinfonietta’s co-founder David Atherton had come to know Gerhard at Cambridge, and so these recordings bear the stamp of authority, as well as thorough preparation. In a new interview for the set with note-writer Peter Quantrill, Atherton explains the genesis of the Sinfonietta as formed around the unique instrumentation of Schoenberg’s First Chamber Symphony. He and his colleagues shook up the London concert scene in the 1970s with their energy and commitment to modernist classics and living composers.
However, the Sinfonietta brought the same incisive musicianship to Mozart’s wind serenades and Schubert’s sacred music, as these Argo recordings testify. A further rarity is the album of clarinet concertos by Louis Spohr, with the ensemble’s long-standing clarinettist, Antony Pay, as soloist. Recorded after a complete Stravinsky concert series, their version of Agon has long been recognised as a definitive account. The Gerhard album preserves all three of the composer’s late and exquisite ‘Zodiac’ pieces, Gemini, Libra and Leo, the last two named after the zodiacal signs of Gerhard and his wife.
The set also includes the 3-LP Weill set that Atherton and the Sinfonietta recorded for Deutsche Grammophon in 1975, and concludes with the Ligeti album recorded that same year by the ensemble for Decca’s 20th-century HEAD series with soloists Aurèle Nicolet (flute) and Heinz Holliger (oboe).
The set makes a significant contribution to the Schoenberg 150th anniversary year, as well as telling a compelling story of one of the UK’s most innovative performing ensembles.
CD 1 MOZART
Serenade K. 361 ‘Gran Partita’
FIRST RELEASE ON CD
CD 2 MOZART
Serenades K. 375 & 388
Antony Pay
FIRST RELEASE ON CD
CD 3 SPOHR
Clarinet Concertos Nos. 1 & 2
Antony Pay
FIRST RELEASE ON CD
CD 4 SCHUBERT
Mass No. 4
Wind Octet D.72*
Eine kleine Trauermusik
Gesang der Geister über den Wassern
Phyllis Bryn-Julson; Jan DeGaetani
Anthony Rolfe Johnson; Malcolm King
London Sinfonietta Chorus
*FIRST RELEASE ON CD
CD 5 SCHOENBERG
Verklärte Nacht*
Serenade Op. 24
John Shirley-Quirk
*FIRST INTERNATIONAL RELEASE ON CD
CD 6 SCHOENBERG
Chamber Symphony No. 1*
Pierrot Lunaire
Ein Stelldichein*
Herzgewächse*
Three Pieces for Chamber Orchestra*
Nachtwandler (Brettl-Lieder)*
Mary Thomas; June Barton
CD 7 SCHOENBERG
Wind Quintet
Der Wunsch des Liebhabers*
Der neue Klassizimus*
Lied der Waldtaube (Gurrelieder)*
Die eiserne Brigade
Weihnachtsmusik*
Anna Reynolds
London Sinfonietta Chorus
*FIRST INTERNATIONAL RELEASE ON CD
CD 8 SCHOENBERG
Suite Op. 29
Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte
Phantasy for Violin and Piano*
Gerald English
Nona Liddell; John Constable
*FIRST INTERNATIONAL RELEASE ON CD
CD 9
STRAVINSKY Agon*
BERG Chamber Concerto
György Pauk; Paul Crossley
*FIRST INTERNATIONAL RELEASE ON CD
CD 10
GERHARD
Libra; Gemini; Leo
FIRST RELEASE ON CD
CDs 11–12 WEILL
Kleine Dreigroschenmusik
Mahagonny Songspiel; Violin Concerto
Happy End; Das Berliner Requiem
Pantomime I; Vom Tod im Wald
Mary Thomas; Meriel Dickinson
Philip Langridge; Ian Partridge
Benjamin Luxon; Michael Rippon
Nona Liddell
CD 13 LIGETI
Melodien for Orchestra
Double Concerto
Chamber Concerto
Aurèle Nicolet; Heinz Holliger
LONDON SINFONIETTA
DAVID ATHERTON
“Monumental, and monumentally important … Throughout one is conscious that these are not interpretations which have been put together specially for the recording, but ones that have had time to grow and settle.” Gramophone, September 1974 (Schoenberg)
“For such an amount of marvellous music mostly marvellously performed, this set is a delight, and very welcome indeed.” Musical Times, September 1975 (Schoenberg)
“June Barton sings Herzgewächse, the astronautical Maeterlinck setting, with amazing security … John Shirley-Quirk does a really distinguished job on the solo in the Serenade … The serious Schoenberg admirer will doubtless want this set.” High Fidelity, July 1976 (Schoenberg)
“[The Sinfonietta’s] players are English musicians trained in the great tradition – a perfect combination for Schoenberg. In short, they play this music with the same care, big line and attention to detail they would give Beethoven or Brahms … Schoenberg would have been pleased.” Stereo Review, April 1977 (Schoenberg)
“The performances still retain their proficient sting and expressive ferocity. Atherton’s alert London Sinfonietta revels in the tart edge of Weill’s whiplash orchestrations” 10/10 rating Classics Today.com
“Sensitive performances… It would be difficult for anyone not to be moved by the endings of Libra and Leo.” Gramophone, August 1977 (Gerhard)
“Excellent playing here and throughout the record, which in sum was well worth waiting for: it deserves the widest circulation.” Musical Times, September 1977 (Gerhard)
“The London Sinfonietta are well served by Argo’s mellow but well detailed recording … The playing is, as one would expect, very distinguished, and the performances are well prepared, affectionate, and sensitive to detail.” Gramophone, May 1980 (Mozart: Serenades K.375 & K.388)
“David Atherton and his admirable singers and players deal with the music most sympathetically… The playing has all the artistry one expects from members of the Sinfonietta.” Gramophone, June 1980 (Schubert: Sacred Works)
“Pay plays the two works brilliantly … a very stylish pair of performances … David Atherton accompanies him deftly … A very enjoyable record.” Gramophone, March 1981 (Spohr: Clarinet Concertos)
“This is a marvellous record. Agon receives a well-nigh ideal performance … Without underplaying the [Berg] Concerto’s bewilderingly fertile inventiveness … Atherton emphasizes its lyricism, warmth and good humour.” Gramophone, July 1981 (Stravinsky, Berg)
“This supremely self-confident score, ranging over the composer’s personal musical history from Lully to Webern and endlessly fascinating in the new ensembles it makes to work, shows up the strengths of the Sinfonietta and of Atherton’s brisk, calculated style.” The Musical Times, April 1982 (Stravinsky: Agon)