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Fauré - Piano Quartets Nos. 1 & 2 (2010)
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aliomodo
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Date :
06 Feb 2011 14:23:50
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Fauré - Piano Quartets Nos. 1 & 2 (Kathryn Stott; The Hermitage String Trio) (2010)
FLAC + CUE + LOG | TT 71:50 | Pdf booklet | 242 mb | HF & FS
Recorded 2009 | Released 2010
FLAC + CUE + LOG | TT 71:50 | Pdf booklet | 242 mb | HF & FS
Recorded 2009 | Released 2010
"Stott and the Heritage Trio imbue the hushed sections with a sense of eerie menace, refusing to smooth the edges, which is certainly not to say they are rough and ready elsewhere ... the exquisite account by Stott of the fourth Nocturne is the icing on the cake. (...) Kathryn Stott reinforces her position as one of the finest Fauré interpreters of her generation." (BBC Music Magazine)
Personnel:
Kathryn Stott: piano
The Hermitage String Trio
Recording:
Potton Hall, Dunwich, Suffolk; 24–26 April 2009
Chandos CHAN 10582
Track listing:
1. Piano Quartet No.1, Op.15 - I. Allegro molto moderato
2. Piano Quartet No.1, Op.15 - II. Scherzo. Allegro vivo
3. Piano Quartet No.1, Op.15 - III. Adagio
4. Piano Quartet No.1, Op.15 - IV. Allegro molto
5. Piano Quartet No.2, Op.45 - I. Allegro molto moderato
6. Piano Quartet No.2, Op.45 - II. Allegro molto
7. Piano Quartet No.2, Op.45 - III. Adagio non troppo
8. Piano Quartet No.2, Op.45 - IV. Allegro molto - Più mosso
9. Nocturne No.4, Op.36 - Andante molto moderato
Reviews:
'It seems scarcely credible given the riches in his output, but Fauré was not initially inclined towards chamber music. As he recalled towards the end of his life, before the formation of the Société Nationale de Musique, he ‘would not have dreamt of composing a sonata or quartet’. Works such as the two Piano Quartets are such natural, intimate and essential expressions of Fauré’s aesthetic sensibility that it is no exaggeration to say that the Société was the catalyst to him discovering himself as a composer.
Written in the late 1870s, the time of his doomed engagement to Marianne Viardot, the C minor Piano Quartet is the better known of the two. If there is any hint of the pain this caused, it is in the slow movement. However, this is no impassioned outburst in the manner of Berlioz, but a noble and profoundly beautiful melancholy.
This understated De Profundis brings out the best in both of these ensembles, but the outer movements delineate the differing approaches more clearly. The Trio Wanderer, bolstered by Antoine Tamestit on viola, is soft-grained, with wonderfully fluid string phrasing and rounded tone from the entire ensemble. The Chandos disc is spikier, crackling with energy thanks to Kathryn Stott’s superlative pianism. Her outstanding pedigree in Fauré’s music is to the fore. She is joined by the Heritage Trio, who have rich string textures, but are not quite as rhythmically taut.
The G minor Piano Quartet (Op. 45, not Op. 55 as twice stated on the Harmonia Mundi disc) is an equally fine work, with the scurrying, agitated rhythms of the Scherzo confounding those who expect understated geniality from Fauré. Stott and the Heritage Trio imbue the hushed sections with a sense of eerie menace, refusing to smooth the edges, which is certainly not to say they are rough and ready elsewhere, as is clear from their poignant delicacy at the opening of the slow movement.
While the Trio Wanderer give fine performances, the recording occasionally loses focus, and there is a periodic (and distracting) low thudding. The combination of vitality and lyricism from Stott and the Heritage Trio ultimately makes their versions of these chamber masterpieces more compelling, while the exquisite account by Stott of the fourth Nocturne is the icing on the cake.' (BBC Music Magazine)
Written in the late 1870s, the time of his doomed engagement to Marianne Viardot, the C minor Piano Quartet is the better known of the two. If there is any hint of the pain this caused, it is in the slow movement. However, this is no impassioned outburst in the manner of Berlioz, but a noble and profoundly beautiful melancholy.
This understated De Profundis brings out the best in both of these ensembles, but the outer movements delineate the differing approaches more clearly. The Trio Wanderer, bolstered by Antoine Tamestit on viola, is soft-grained, with wonderfully fluid string phrasing and rounded tone from the entire ensemble. The Chandos disc is spikier, crackling with energy thanks to Kathryn Stott’s superlative pianism. Her outstanding pedigree in Fauré’s music is to the fore. She is joined by the Heritage Trio, who have rich string textures, but are not quite as rhythmically taut.
The G minor Piano Quartet (Op. 45, not Op. 55 as twice stated on the Harmonia Mundi disc) is an equally fine work, with the scurrying, agitated rhythms of the Scherzo confounding those who expect understated geniality from Fauré. Stott and the Heritage Trio imbue the hushed sections with a sense of eerie menace, refusing to smooth the edges, which is certainly not to say they are rough and ready elsewhere, as is clear from their poignant delicacy at the opening of the slow movement.
While the Trio Wanderer give fine performances, the recording occasionally loses focus, and there is a periodic (and distracting) low thudding. The combination of vitality and lyricism from Stott and the Heritage Trio ultimately makes their versions of these chamber masterpieces more compelling, while the exquisite account by Stott of the fourth Nocturne is the icing on the cake.' (BBC Music Magazine)
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