As with cogwheels, one thing leads to the other, and because I had reviewed on Amazon.com another version of Jean-Baptiste Davaux’ Symphonie concertante that is played by Concerto Köln on their program for Capriccio La Prise de la Bastille (which I transferred from Amazon yesterday), I carried over that review as well, Musiques de la Révolution française – Hommage du monde – L’Europe (Davaux, Cambini, Kreutzer). Luis Michal, Marta Carfi, Orchestre de chambre de Bavière Munich. Cybelia CY 841. In turn, I make reference in that review to other CDs that I’ve reviewed, published at the time of the celebration of the bicentennial of the French revolution, which I now need to import over here. I also created the composers’ entries for that Cybelia CD. I need to do so with the composers of yesterday’s transfers, Gossec, Vanhal, Mahaut, Martin and Dittersdorf! Again it’s never a simple copy and paste job. As I was doing the entry for Kreutzer (and this is the French Kreutzer, Rodolphe, the dedicatee of Beethoven’s 9th Violin-Piano Sonata – which he is said never to have played, how shamefully ungrateful! -, not to be confused in particular with the early-romantic German composer Conradin Kreutzer), I checked what else of interest had been recorded and there is an attractive 2-CD set of his opera La Mort d’Abel, published by a Spanish label which I first encountered, Ediciones Singulares, and co-produced by the interesting Palazzetto Bru-Zane which houses the Center for French Romantic Music. Turns out that they have a very interesting catalog of rare works on Ediciones Singulares and other labels, so I went ahead and compiled a discography… Cogwheels…