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The Independent
17.9.2004
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Corelli Orchestra, Pittville Pump Room,
Cheltenham
By Roderic Dunnett
For half a century, the Cheltenham
Festival, ceded by Michael Berkeley this year to the conductor
Martyn Brabbins, has confirmed the town's impeccable music
credentials. Its intimate Regency Pittville Pump Room remains -
after London's Wigmore Hall - one of the most revealing chamber
recital halls in England.
Now, Cheltenham has a top-notch Baroque
orchestra of its own. The conductor Warwick Cole, a sensitive
keyboard performer - his family makes harpsichords - and one of
the region's most succulent cello continuo players, launched
his Corelli Orchestra in 1989. Led by the Baroque violinist
Sharon Lindo, whose track record includes The King's Consort,
and with strings of the ilk of the Andrew Manze pupil Ben
Sansom, it has blossomed. The Corelli looks set to produce, at
its best, a gutsy sound with the teeth to challenge the
European Baroque groups of Minkowski, Jacobs or Haim.
Cole's choice of repertoire suggests a
sound, informed musicianship rooted in detailed study of
18th-century performance practice. His spare gestures are
rounded and helpful; he enthuses; but - unlike some enthusiasts
- his head rhythmically leads and anticipates, rather than just
bobbing disconcertingly. As with Haim, the hands shape.
Cole, like his mellow Baroque flautist,
Jonathan Morgan, clearly knows his Quantz, Zelenka, C P E Bach.
He knows his Chevalier de St-Georges, too: an Op 11 symphony by
the "Black Mozart" supplied a staggering start to
Mozart in Paris, the concert that launched the Corelli's
four-part Cheltenham series.
Vital, twangy violin tone (doubly superb
in several telling pianissimi), controlled downbows, honed
transitions and leads, spruce natural woodwind (despite hints
of ropey mutual oboe tuning), bassoon/cello doubling and some
vital a caccia horns enhanced the desirable sound of this
energised Baroque-Classical ensemble. St-Georges has Mozart's
gift of providing perfect support: his second-violin and viola
lines were an education in themselves.
Duetting solo violins entranced, too, in
the fascinating five-part concertante of Mozart's 1776 Serenata
Notturna K239, eerily timpani-supported. Their final Rondo
glistened. Mozart's Flute and Harp Concerto K299 proved
rockier, mainly because of the harpist Danielle Perrett's
rhythmic-dynamic waywardness, though one better-synchronised,
virtually alla turca soloists' exchange was truly galvanising.
J C Bach's sprightly D major Op 3 Sinfonia - oboes and horns to
perfection - rounded off.
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