Shostakovich, much 
                like Johannes Brahms, was amazingly 
                capable of condensing the power of a 
                symphony orchestra, and of expressing 
                an equal power and emotional scope through 
                the medium of a chamber ensemble. Such 
                is the case with these two early-ish 
                works, ably presented by Elisabeth Leonskaja 
                and the Borodin String Quartet. 
              
 
              
After the success of 
                his first string quartet in 1938, the 
                members of the Beethoven Quartet immediately 
                called upon Shostakovich to compose 
                another work for them. The result was 
                the G minor quintet, which the composer 
                and the Beethovens premiered in 1940. 
                The work was a major critical success 
                and was awarded the first ever Stalin 
                Prize. 
              
 
              
Highly traditional 
                in its structure, the work is as much 
                a suite of ancient forms as it is harmonically 
                original and innovative. Shostakovich 
                never ceases to amaze listeners with 
                his uncanny perception of timbre, and 
                the ways in which he can exploit the 
                tonal capabilities of the instruments 
                for which he writes. This is never more 
                evident than in the ghostly Fugue, which 
                calls for a lengthy passage with the 
                strings muted. 
              
 
              
Likewise, in the later 
                Trio, Op. 67, the composer makes use 
                of interesting effects when he requires 
                that the cello play the entire opening 
                song in the first movement, using harmonics 
                and thus making it the treble instrument 
                and the violin the bass. Shostakovich 
                exorcised quite a few demons in the 
                writing of this piece, having seen the 
                terror of the Second World War and the 
                havoc it wreaked in his homeland, and 
                having lost two of the major figures 
                in his life to an early death. This 
                is also the work that would see the 
                composer utilizing Jewish folk melodies 
                as his source of inspiration, a habit 
                that would last through several more 
                compositions, until the official Stalinist 
                anti-Semitism would make it physically 
                unsafe for him to continue the practice. 
              
 
              
These are remarkably 
                well-executed performances, with all 
                of the Russian gusto that you might 
                expect from such a group of musicians. 
                Of particular merit is the special attention 
                paid to colors and shadings of tone 
                by both pianist and string players. 
                Every detail of the score has been thoroughly 
                thought through and the give and take 
                between the members is outstanding. 
              
 
              
Production values are 
                somewhat haphazard. Sound quality is 
                what one would expect from a company 
                of Teldec’s reputation: superb. However 
                some important corners were cut in this 
                lower-price reissue, the most egregious 
                of which is the complete absence of 
                the names of the members of the Borodin 
                Quartet. Program notes are informative 
                and concise, always a plus. A highly 
                recommendable performance of two of 
                the last century’s major chamber works. 
              
 
              
Kevin Sutton