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George Enescu: Octuor, Dixtuor - Viotta Ensemble (2001)
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Feb 18, 2016
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GEORGE ENESCU (1881-1955)
Octuor for Strings, op. 7
Dixtuor for Winds, op. 14

George Enescu was admitted to the conservatory in Vienna in 1888, where he studied the violin, harmony, counterpoint and composition with Robert Fuchs (the teacher of Gustav Mahler). He took his final examination at the age of twelve, gaining the highest honors. In 1895, he continued his studies in France with Fauré and Massenet. When in 1899 he was awarded a first prize for violin at the Paris Conservatory, he was already a well-known composer, having had an entire evening devoted to his works in 1897. From this point on, his impressive career alternated between Paris and his native Romania. Not only was he a virtuoso violinist who performed both as a soloist and in various chamber music combinations (the Enescu Quartet, and a trio with pianist Alfredo Casella and cellist Louis Fournier) he was also an outstanding pianist, accompanying Jacques Thibaud at the premiere of his Second Violin Sonata. Furthermore, at the age of 18, he made his debut as an orchestral conductor. Sadly, his busy life as a performer regularly prevented him from composing, a task he considered to be his first calling. Nonetheless, this is not the only reason his entire output consisted of only 33 opus numbers. Possessed of a critical mind, he would spend many years revising works and many never reached publication at all. He worked, for example, twenty years on his opera Oedipe. The Octour for strings presented here and the Dixtour for winds occupy a major position not only in the body of chamber music written by Enescu but also in the 20th century chamber music literature as a whole.

The Viotta Ensemble, made up of members of the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, was formed in 1992. It was named after Henri Viotta (1843 1933), who in 1888 conducted the first concert in Amsterdam's Concertgebouw. Since its formation the ensemble, comprising around 20 musicians, has appeared regularly in established series such as the Saturday Afternoon Matinee (Concertgebouw, Amsterdam), the Midis Musica ux of the Théátre du Chátelet in Paris, and chamber music series of both the Muntschouwburg in Brussels and the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam. The ensemble has performed a wide range of programmes containing works such as Brahms' First Serenade, Mozart's Gran Partita and Kurt Weill's Violin Concerto (conducted by Philippe Herreweghe), Walton’s Façade (under Reinbert de Leeuw), Strauss's Sonatine for Winds, Jolivet's Second Trumpet Concerto (under Edo de Waart) and Walton's opera The Bear (under Kenneth Montgomery). Its unconducted repertoire includes compositions from Mozart (from the flute quartets to the windsserenades), Schubert, Beethoven, Mendelssohn (Octet for strings) Ravel (Introduction et Allegro), Roussel, Milhaud (Création du Monde) to Stravinsky (Histoire du Soldat, Octet) and Berio. A number of CD recordings for Ottavo and Channel Classics with works by Poulenc, Enescu, Françaix and Koechlin have received enthusiastic reviews in music journals. The ensemble has also recorded Dutch music by composers such as Van Bree, Coenen, Röntgen, Van Gilse and Escher for the CNM label.

Octuor for Double String Quartet, op. 7
1. Très modéré [10'37]
2. Très fougueux [8'12]
3. Lentement [8'24]
4. Mouvement de Valse bien rythmée [8'15]
Dixtuor for Wind instruments, op. 14 *
5. Doucement mouvementé [9'27]
6. Tempo di Menuet [8'05]
7. Allêgrement [6'14]
Total CD time: 59'16

Viotta Ensemble
Violin: Alexander Kerr, Marijn Mijnders, Caroline Strumphier, Susanne Jaspers
Viola: Ken Hakii, Guus Jeukendrup
Cello: Godfried Hoogeveen, Yke Viersen
Flute: Emily Beynon, Rien de Reede
Oboe: Jan Spronk
English horn: Jan Kouwenhoven
Clarinet: Jacques Meertens, Hein Wiedijk
Bassoon: Gustavo Nuñez, Jos de Lange
Horn: Hans Duilaert, Jaap van der Vliet
Micha Hamel, conductor *

Recording: Maria Minor, Utrecht - NL, October 1999 (Octuor); February 2001 (Dixtuor)
Recorded, edited & produced by Ottavo Recordings, Edo Santman, Marc Zoutendijk
© 2001 Ottavo Recordings, The Hague, The Netherlands
OTR C20179