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10th March 11, 08:29 PM
#1
Mozart Clarinet Quintet
I recorded the Mozart Clarinet Quintet with a string quartet of friends back in 1998 when I was working at Santa Clara University. The concert was one of the first in the new recital hall, which was lovely. I've been meaning to get those recordings up on YouTube forever.
Well I finally did it. Taken all together this is about 40 minutes of music.
You can give them a listen at the following URLS
First Movement
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EcuaFhAgm1A
Second Movement
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lwDX3mjiODM
Third Movement
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WaES08iPGW8
Fourth Movement
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iZDKmePp8GI
Last edited by Alan H; 12th March 11 at 03:24 PM.
Reason: Originally wrote that this was recorded in 1988, not 1998
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10th March 11, 09:38 PM
#2
Thanks for posting. I hadn't heard the Quintet in many years. Lovely.
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10th March 11, 10:02 PM
#3
Thank you, Alan. The clarinet quintet has always been one of my favorites and you played it splendidly. Do you still play?
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11th March 11, 01:03 AM
#4
Thanks, gentlemen. yes, I still play. Currently I play in Klezmer band that has an alter ego that we call the Burns Supper Society...and we do jigs and reels and slow aires, etc. I play whistles in the celtic incarnation of the group.
I am hoping to make a connection with a cellist up in San Francisco turn into something extraordinary for a chamber concert in December. This would be a first outing and I'm hoping for Ralph Towners "Icarus"....something for "cello, six hands"....and yes, you read that right, and another original piece by the cellists boyfriend, who happens to play guitar. I suspect that this piece will be for soprano saxophone,electric guitar and electric cello, and maybe percussion. Fingers crossed.
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11th March 11, 05:37 AM
#5
Very nice, Alan! Wolfie and Anton would be proud. If I was guessing, a 1988 setup was probably a Buffet with Selmer HS* or **? Thanks for posting this. Your work and phrasing across the horn was very smooth and sensitive with very nice technique. Very pleasing to the ear.
Doug
Clan Ogilvie; AF&AM/Scottish Rite/York Rite/Shriner; Charleston Scottish Society; Brotherhood of the Isle of Skye; Matt Newsome Kilt Owners Group
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11th March 11, 12:10 PM
#6
 Originally Posted by 2a5t2f7
Very nice, Alan! Wolfie and Anton would be proud. If I was guessing, a 1988 setup was probably a Buffet with Selmer HS* or **? Thanks for posting this. Your work and phrasing across the horn was very smooth and sensitive with very nice technique. Very pleasing to the ear.
That was my 50's-vintage Buffet R-13 with a custom Jim Kanter mouthpiece made from a Rifau blank. Jim worked for decades in the Hollywood studios and his mouthpieces are now collectors items. He was my teacher at UCSB 1978-79.
My B-flat is a Selmer series 9, which is the last series they made with the straight tone holes. I love that horn.
I played an HS* in High School! I still have it as my second emergency backup mouthpiece. The first emergency backup is one of Jims earlier adaptations of a VanDoren mouthpiece.
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11th March 11, 12:21 PM
#7
Alan,
WOW! Thanks for posting this!
[I][B]Ad fontes[/B][/I]
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11th March 11, 12:27 PM
#8
Alan, you need to make business cards
"Alan H.: Expert Musician, Kiltsmith, and chucker of large, heavy weights" 
The music sounds really smooth and I enjoyed it a lot. 
Thanks for posting this. -Steve
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11th March 11, 12:28 PM
#9
Hmmm...Klezmer. I've always enjoyed Klezmer music. Do you have any recordings from this group available? It's good of you to share your talents here!
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11th March 11, 12:34 PM
#10
 Originally Posted by Steve of Lansing
Alan, you need to make business cards
"Alan H.: Expert Musician, Kiltsmith, and chucker of large, heavy weights"
The music sounds really smooth and I enjoyed it a lot.
Thanks for posting this. -Steve
------intrepid nautical man, plain speaker, gunboat diplomat and to make Alan blush a big fierce bear of a man(not hardly!) with a heart of gold!
Last edited by Jock Scot; 11th March 11 at 12:40 PM.
" Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the adherence of idle minds and minor tyrants". Field Marshal Lord Slim.
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