The Boston Classical Orchestra embodied its name on Friday, performing works by Haydn and Mozart, a pair with enough celebrity to attract a healthy crowd to Faneuil Hall with a program of rarities and, in one case, a kind of premiere.
Haydn's Symphony No. 40 is lesser-known among its 100-odd brethren, perhaps, as music director Steven Lipsitt wryly noted, because it lacks a marketable nickname. Invention still abounds: A charmingly sparse andante - strings only, a melody over steady footfalls - gives way to a wind-spiked minuet, a return to the ball after a flirtatious stroll. The performance was colorful but boxy, phrases blocked out more than shaped. In the finale, a brisk fugue tuckpointed with classical sequences, the groove proved initially elusive; the movement was encored without conductor, Lipsitt joking to the audience that it would sound better. It did - having found the tempo, the ensemble gave the music a fleet, coursing elegance.
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