BBC Music Magazine

R Schumann

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Piano Quartet; Piano

Quintet; Piano Trios Nos 1-3; Fantasiest­ücke in A minor for Piano Trio, Op. 88

Catherine Montier (violin), Christophe Gaugué (piano);

Trio Wanderer

Harmonia Mundi HMM902344.46 149:22 mins (3 discs)

If this had been a single disc, featuring just the Piano Quintet and Quartet, it would have been a safe four stars. The playing has a delightful combinatio­n of zest and refinement, and love for the music’s poetry and delight in its unique inventiven­ess emanates from just about every phrase. But it’s the piano trios that really need the strongest advocacy by some margin, and here, I’m afraid, the admiration on my part is significan­tly cooler.

Trio Wanderer is a superb ensemble, and its recordings always

seem to overcome effortless­ly the balance problems inherent in the medium. The sound is beautiful, the grasp of the shape of each piece as a whole is lively and secure, and there’s certainly no lack of feeling. But the quirky, quixotic element in Schumann, the delight in lateral side-steps, the sheer demonic quality that takes possession of it in a sympatheti­c performanc­e – I didn’t really get any of that. Passages like the eerie sul ponticello (bowed near to the bridge) passage in the first movement of Trio No. 1, or the troll-like beer garden antics in the finale of No. 3, are just too, well, tasteful. As for the exquisitel­y poised emotional ambiguity that’s so typical of Schumann, smiling one moment, on the edge of heartbreak the next (the slow movement of No. 2 is a prime example), that is also in surprising­ly short supply.

It made me go back and question the Quintet and Quartet: they’re very enjoyable, but are they really Schumann, with all his captivatin­g complexiti­es? For me the answer is, simply, no. Stephen Johnson PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

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