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Stereoplay

Rezension Stereoplay Sonderheft zur HIGH END 2018 | Lothar Brandt | 1. Juni 2018 Neueste Feinkost

Nach so viel Entschweben in Wohlklang fällt es naturgemäß schwer, zur Erde...
Fono Forum

Rezension Fono Forum Juni 2018 | Ole Pflüger | 1. Juni 2018 Wenn ein markerschütternder Ton in ein ansonsten stilles Notenfeld kracht oder...

Wenn ein markerschütternder Ton in ein ansonsten stilles Notenfeld kracht oder Brüllen unvermittelt zum Flüstern wird, haben Marc Coppey und Peter Laul ihre besten Momente. Denn sie meißeln die scharfen Konturen aus Beethovens Musik hervor, bringen ihre ganze Drastik zum Klingen. Gelegentlich wirkt die Aufnahme aber etwas hölzern, weil die Interpreten das schnelle Tempo scheuen. Zum Beispiel stapfen sie durch den zweiten Satz der A-Dur-Sonate, der dadurch viel von seinem Witz einbüßt. Sonst tummeln sich an dieser Stelle überdrehte Synkopen, aber hier klingen die Pointen eher ungelenk. Der drastische Beethoven siegt über den spielenden. Schöner wäre es, die beiden hätten sich verbündet.
Fono Forum

Rezension Fono Forum Juni 2018 | Christoph Vratz | 1. Juni 2018 Unerlöst durch Tür sieben

[…] Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau hat den Blaubart noch zwei weitere Male festgehalten: 1962 bei einem Festival-Auftritt in Luzern mit Irmgard Seefried unter Rafael Kubelik sowie 1979 an der Seite von Julia Varady, dem Bayerischen Staatsorchester und Wolfgang Sawallisch. Gerade der schweizerische Mitschnitt ist eine Empfehlung wert, zumal es Kubelik gelingt, das Bedrohliche mit dem Luftigen zu verbinden: hier das gellende Flimmern der Folterkammer, dort der klanglich opulent erblühende Zaubergarten. Fischer-Dieskaus Blaubart ist auch hier ein fürchterlicher Zeitgenosse: Wie konnte sich Judith jemals in ihn verlieben? Seine Aufforderung, die siebte Tür zu öffnen, scheint frei von aller zwischenmenschlichen Wärme.
Fanfare

Rezension Fanfare Issue 41:5 (May/June 2018) | Jerry Dubins | 1. Mai 2018 This is Volume 4 in the Swiss Piano Trio’s survey of Beethoven’s works for...

This is Volume 4 in the Swiss Piano Trio’s survey of Beethoven’s works for piano trio—those originally composed as such and those arranged/adapted for violin, cello, and piano by the composer himself. Whether this wraps up the Swiss Piano Trio’s survey or not, I don’t know, but I received Volumes 1 and 3 for review and recommended them both highly, though I believe I still gave the edge to the outstandingly well-played and down-to-the-last-scrap complete five-disc set by the Trio Élégiaque on Brilliant Classics. Volume 2 of the Swiss Piano Trio’s cycle went to Paul Orgel, who felt the performances were good but not competitive with the best.

It might be helpful to make an accounting of where the Swiss Piano Trio stands in its survey in relation to the long-completed Trio Élégiaque’s set. First off, let’s address the matter of numbering. Not counting either the few pieces of juvenilia he wrote for violin, cello, and piano, or the later works he arranged for piano trio from pieces originally scored for different media, Beethoven composed six distinct piano trios. The first three, composed in 1795 and bearing the collective opus number 1, were Beethoven’s first officially published works. Logically, we refer to them as the Piano Trios Nos. 1, 2, and 3. Not so logically, the next two distinct piano trios are No. 5, “Ghost,” and No. 6, composed together as a pair in 1808 and published as opp. 70/1 and 70/2. Beethoven would write only one more distinct piano trio, and that would be No. 7, the “Archduke” in 1811, published as op. 97.

Right away, something doesn’t add up here. There are only six trios, but they’re numbered 1–3 and 5–7. Is there a number 4 and, if so, what happened to it? Well, there is and there isn’t. In 1797, Beethoven composed a trio, which he dedicated to the Countess Maria Wilhelmina von Thun, but that work was not scored for violin, cello, and piano. It was scored for clarinet (or violin), cello (or bassoon), and piano, and published the following year as op. 11. Beethoven originally conceived the work for clarinet, but because it could be played as a standard piano trio with violin, and it was the next trio work Beethoven wrote after the first three piano trios, by default it became No. 4. The Swiss Piano Trio gives us this trio in its violin version on the present album. The familiar “Gassenhauer” nickname derives from the variations theme in the finale, “Pria ch’io l’impegno” (Before I go to work) from the dramma giocoso, L’amor marinaro ossia Il corsaro by Joseph Weigl. It’s said that the tune was so popular people would sing or whistle it in Vienna’s alleyways and streets—Gassen in German.

The Trio in E♭ Major, op. 38, was too far removed from a standard piano trio in its original instrumentation to be numbered as one of them. It wasn’t a matter of simply exchanging one instrument for another of similar range. This transformation required significant surgery, for op. 38 is in fact a reduction and adaptation of Beethoven’s Septet, op. 20, originally scored for clarinet, horn, bassoon, violin, viola, cello, and double bass. There wasn’t even a piano part in the original; that had to be derived and fleshed out in idiomatic pianistic writing from the harmonic framework of the piece. Performed as a trio for violin, cello, and piano, as it is here and elsewhere, it’s actually one step removed from the original version of the arrangement, for Beethoven retained the clarinet as the lead soprano voice, doing away with the violin altogether and not indicating it as an alternate for the clarinet, as he did in the “Gassenhauer” Trio. The Septet enjoyed such popularity that Beethoven is said to have come to resent that it was held in higher esteem than some of his later works which he considered superior, which begs the question of why he decided to adapt it as a trio. No doubt the answer was money.

To confuse matters a bit, a piano trio by Beethoven in the same key and believed to have been composed in 1790 or 1791 was discovered among his manuscripts following his death. It was published posthumously in 1830, and was subsequently entered into his catalog as WoO 38. So, we have two piano trios, both in E♭ Major, one tagged op. 38—that’s this one, the Septet arrangement—the other tagged WoO 38. So far, the Swiss Piano Trio hasn’t gotten to any of the WoO numbers, and whether it will or not, I don’t know, though the inclusion of the Hess-numbered Allegretto in E♭ Major on this fourth volume would seem to suggest the affirmative.

Trio Élégiaque’s set, of course, includes not only the Hess item and the WoO numbers, but also the composer’s piano trio adaptations of his Symphony No. 2 and his String Quintet, op. 4, the latter arrangement having its own assigned opus number, 63. The trio version of the String Quintet, however, is actually twice removed from the original work, which was the Octet in E♭ Major, op. 103. The Octet’s high opus number reflects its posthumous publication date of 1837; its actual composition date is 1792–93.

Unless and until the Swiss Piano Trio matches the Trio Élégiaque for completeness, I will continue to promote the latter on that aspect of its survey. With respect to the performances, however, that preference is beginning to lessen just a bit, and that speaks to how superbly well the Swiss Piano Trio acquits itself in these works. The playing is of a glorious tonal purity and beauty, enhanced by Audite’s exquisite recording. Interpretively, the players exercise what strikes me as an intuitively perfect sense of timing in balancing the music’s humor against its moments of touching emotional expression. These are really outstanding performances.

At this point, I’d hate to have to choose between the Swiss Piano Trio and the Trio Élégiaque, and luckily, I don’t have to. You wouldn’t go wrong with either of them; however, two factors may sway you in one direction or another. The Trio Élégiaque’s five-disc set on Brilliant Classics is selling on ArkivMusic for $17.99, or approximately $3.60 per disc, while Audite’s releases, not yet available as a boxed set, continue to sell for a pricey $18.99 per disc. The other factor is that Audite’s recordings are available from the label’s website, audite.de, as downloads in HD format. The Trio Élégiaque’s recordings can also be downloaded from iTunes and Spotify, but not in HD format, as far as I can tell. Those considerations aside, basing my conclusions solely on the performances and the quality of the reviewed download, I have to accord this release my strongest recommendation.
American Record Guide

Rezension American Record Guide May/June 2018 | Bradley Lehman | 1. Mai 2018 Kemal Cem Yilmaz spends most of his time in Germany and his native Turkey. This...

Kemal Cem Yilmaz spends most of his time in Germany and his native Turkey. This is his debut solo recording. His interpretation is forthright. It sounds like he is going mostly for a solemn serenity and achieving it. He takes about 20% of the repeats: Variations 2, 4, 6, 10, 11, 19, and the second half of 16. Variations 7, 9, 13, 15, 25, and the Aria are remarkably slow. 25 is so slow that it lasts 6:28 without repeats. Variations 26 and 29 project more joyous character, rivaling the blistering speed in Glenn Gould’s 1955 recording. Yilmaz plays main-note trills (instead of starting from the upper note) and there is a mis-learned note in Variation 6, but everything else sounds conventionally pianistic and well prepared. The booklet doesn’t say much except that Yilmaz humbly reveres Bach. I respect albums that are made as well as this, but I’m not excited about them.

[…] I’ve reviewed ten other harpsichord and piano performances of the Goldberg Variations here in the past two years. Despite their excellence of execution, none of these three new recordings displace older favorites mentioned in those reviews.
American Record Guide

Rezension American Record Guide May/June 2018 | Stephen Wright | 1. Mai 2018 Exceptionally good recording and performance. Ms Pietsch’s violin growls,...

Exceptionally good recording and performance. Ms Pietsch’s violin growls, spits, and croons; it whispers and whistles. Her lines have clear direction, her phrasing is sculpted and alert. Her intonation has a stimulating variety, but her pitch is always immaculate. She’s matched stroke for stroke by Mr Macelaru and his flexible and responsive band. The belching bass tuba in II of Concerto 1 rattles my sinuses, the heavy bass drum and low strings rumble the floorboards of my old house. The recording is magnificently full and detailed, Pietsch in ideal balance with the orchestra.
I compared this to Arabella Steinbacher on Pentatone (J/A 2014). Steinbacher’s magical slow-motion gossamer coda of Concerto 1’s first movement makes me hold my breath, I don’t want to miss a note, and her performances are altogether mellower, lacking the crunch and flying sparks of Pietsch. With my ears still full of Pentatone’s enveloping surround sound, I again listened to this and was impressed by its full-bodied sound, not at all the disappointment I usually feel on losing SACD’s third dimension. I confess I sometimes read as I listen to music, but this tore my attention from the page again and again. These are gripping performances that can’t be ignored.

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