Not to denigrate his songs or orchestral works, but Brahms’ chamber 
                music is, with a few exceptions, his most pleasing and most admired 
                output. I’d never pick a fight with anyone questioning whether 
                the string quartets or op.120 sonatas really belong in the Parthenon 
                of chamber music. But the String Sextets, the Quintets (Clarinet, 
                Piano, String), the Piano Quartets, the Trios (Clarinet, Piano, 
                Horn), and the Cello and Violin Sonatas are many musicians’ most 
                appreciated daily bread and easily accessible to casual listeners 
                alike. You’d have to be a pretty hardened Brahms-hater to feel, 
                much less think otherwise. 
              
And 
                  because it’s all so terrific, it only makes sense to offer it 
                  all in one convenient box. Deutsche Grammophon has done so, 
                  as part of their complete Brahms Edition. A year later, or so, 
                  Philips followed suit with a box of Brahms’ complete chamber 
                  music of their own. Both were setting very high standards, both 
                  are – inexplicably – out of print right now. In 2003 Brilliant 
                  assembled a collection of their own, which is now also available 
                  as part of their 60 CD complete Brahms set.  
                
Now 
                  Hyperion has entered the fray, and it is most welcome, indeed. 
                  On twelve well filled discs, Hyperion gives us a survey of Brahms’ 
                  chamber music of consistent high quality – possibly unmatched 
                  by any of the competition. Many included performances are not 
                  just good, but favorites and among the finest available. There 
                  are no particular weak spots and the sound quality of these 
                  modern recordings - the oldest is from 1983 - is as high as 
                  we have come to expect from the label.  
                
              
The 
                Raphael Ensemble’s String Sextets (including Roger Tapping) 
                and Quintets would do any company’s catalogue proud. There’s 
                nothing that might be construed as ‘stereotypically British’ here. 
                And although all but two members have changed from the 1988 recording 
                of the Sextets to the 1995 recording of the Quintets (both 
                engineered by Tony Faulkner), the playing is of a seamlessly high 
                quality: glorious, with precision, and most importantly: with 
                lots of heart. Other recordings (Sextets: ASMF Chamber Ensemble 
                [on Chandos] and Leipzig String Quartet++ [MDG], Quintets: Hagen 
                Quartet with Gérard Caussé [DG] and Leipzig String Quartet+ [MDG]) 
                might match, but none surpass the Raphael’s versions.  
              
When 
                  it comes to Brahms’ String Quartets, I don’t generally 
                  enthuse - “undisputed master of composing without ideas” 
                  (H.Wolf) and such… - and I don’t here, either. But having heard 
                  it so often lately – live and on CD – I’m more and more getting 
                  used to them. The New Budapest Quartet, which Hyperion chose 
                  to include in their entirety - instead of patching with their 
                  brand new Takács Quartet recording - aren’t bad at all.  
                
              
I 
                know precious little about András Kiss, Ferenc Balogh, László 
                Barsony, and Károly Botvay, except some of their recordings on 
                Hyperion and Marco Polo (e.g. Bartók, Borodin, Beethoven 
                and lots of Spohr – most of them re-issued on the mid-price Dyad 
                and Helios sub-labels). In these Brahms works, they go 
                well beyond the ‘capable’ and make engaging, very Central European 
                music out of it, downplaying the seriousness and without belaboring 
                any phrase or musical point too long. This isn’t replacing my 
                first choice Alban Berg Quartet (EMI) recording for all three 
                quartets, or the Mandelring Quartet in op. 51, but it pleases 
                plenty. Were I to listen through this whole box again, as I have 
                a few times already, I’d never think of bothering to skip these 
                renditions in favor of others. For one, I’d not want to miss their 
                Piano Quintet, which they play with Piers Lane.  
              
Nostalgia 
                has me consider stormy Leon Fleisher and the Juilliard Quartet 
                (Sony via Arkiv) for the Quintet; I shall always cherish 
                the smooth, sometimes detailed, sometimes bashful Quartetto Italiano 
                with Maurizio Pollini (DG Originals), nor let the exacting, superbly 
                sonorous, occasionally strident Hagen Quartett with Paul Gulda 
                gather dust (DG via Arkiv). Splashier recent releases like said 
                Takács with Stephen Hough (too nervous) or Emerson with Fleisher 
                (too ungainly the execution of the piano part) can’t touch Lane 
                and Budapest.  
              
Among 
                the Piano Quartets, the first – op.25 in g-minor – is by 
                far the most popular. A popularity exemplified (and maybe, partly 
                caused) by Arnold Schoenberg’s oft recorded orchestration of this 
                substantial, 40 minute long work; coincidentally, cpo has 
                just issued a new recording thereof – coupled with 
                Luciano Berio’s orchestra arrangement of the clarinet sonata op.120/1. 
                A couple of years ago an all-star cast of Martha Argerich, Gidon 
                Kremer, Yuri Bashmet, and Mischa Maisky was assembled to record 
                op.25 for DG. Fortunately the four full-blooded musicians celebrated 
                Brahms, not their egos. The result is a brilliant and fiery reading 
                that might never be surpassed in that regard.  
              
While 
                theirs and the Amadeus Quartet’s recording with Emil Gilels 
                - another gem in the DG catalog - sound a little like the Little 
                Symphony That Couldn’t (many of Brahms’ chamber works started 
                out intended to be orchestral works), there are more chamber-music 
                like approaches, too. For example the Trio Wanderer with violist 
                Christophe Gaugué (HMU), or the Beaux Arts 
                Trio who are at their best here with violist Walter Trampler (Philips 
                or Pentatone). The players around Isabelle Faust and Derek Han 
                (for Brilliant Classics) show all their promise in a fleet reading 
                not just of the first but of all three Quartets. That’s stiff 
                competition for the players on the Hyperion set, the Leopold String 
                Quartet (Marianne Thorsen, Lawrence Power, and Kate Gould) who 
                perform with that most nimble-fingered of all pianists, Marc-André 
                Hamelin. And for a recording of all three Quartets, their strongest 
                competition might not be the Beaux Arts or Wanderer Trio, but 
                the Piano Quartet “Domus” on a budget Virgin re-issue.  
              
Although 
                  I’ve cherished the Domus recording for many years now, I’ve 
                  never bothered to look up (or remember) its members. What a 
                  surprise then – or rather: how perfectly logical – to find that 
                  Domus is essentially the expanded Florestan Trio with Susan 
                  Tomes (piano) and Richard Lester (cello), violist Timothy Boulton 
                  and, instead of Anthony Marwood, the genial duo partner of Tomes’, 
                  Krysia Osostowicz, on violin. Before disbanding, Domus had also 
                  been taken onto Hyperion’s artists roster.  
                
Hamelin’s 
                  slightly drier and more enunciated playing and the closer recording 
                  make the Leopold String Trio’s performances more straight-faced 
                  and less reverberant than the modestly indulgent Domus. The 
                  chugging cello line of the op.25 second movement sounds so refined 
                  with the Leopold’s Ms. Gould, she could pass as playing the 
                  viola. And while the Leopold/Hamelin combination sounds incredibly 
                  and impressively fast in the concluding Rondo alla Zingarese, 
                  there’s not the sense of a turbulent, hair-down execution as 
                  with Domus - much less Argerich and co. For those in favor of 
                  leaner, longer lines in Brahms, the immaculate and civilized 
                  Leopold/Hamelin combination - exploring technical extremes without 
                  ever sounding challenged - might be the preferred version. Whatever 
                  the case, few would likely complain if these were their only 
                  versions of the Quartets.  
                
              
There 
                is little in the repertoire where the Florestan Trio would not 
                be my first choice – and that goes for the Brahms Piano Trios 
                as well. Without giving in to the temptation of romantic indulgence, 
                this is superbly played, detailed, and compelling chamber music-making. 
                It ranks right up there with the Beaux Arts Trio who can 
                be a bit more generous and warmer - more ‘continental European’, 
                if you wish - but don’t play quite as impeccably.  
              
Their 
                Horn Trio with Stephen Sterling has all the same qualities, 
                and especially the precision of the musicians. The exceptional 
                Hyperion recording pays dividends here. Susan Tomes’ pianism is 
                just the right mix between assertive and delicate – giving it, 
                apart from the much superior sound, an edge over the 1957 Dennis 
                Brain/Max Salpeter/Cyril Preedy collaboration (BBC Legends). 
                The horn never dominates Anthony Marwood’s violin (as it does 
                with Tuckwell/Perlman/Ashkenazy – Decca, 1968). Of the versions 
                I know, only MDG’s 1995 recording is as well engineered. An interesting 
                comparison would have been the new Harmonia Mundi release with 
                Theunis Van der Zwart playing the work on 
                the Waldhorn (as intended by Brahms) together with his 
                colleagues Isabelle Faust and Alexander Melnikov; alas it just 
                came out this October and I haven’t gotten my ears on it, yet.  
              
There 
                are many favorites in the Clarinet Trio. I’ve not yet heard 
                the most recent recording with the Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson 
                Trio and Ricardo Morales (whose Brahms Clarinet 
                Quintet much impressed me at the National Academy of Sciences 
                in DC, over four years ago) on Koch which came out last month. 
                But the 2005 BIS release of Martin Fröst (with Roland Pöntinen and Torleif Thedéen) was predictably excellent. 
                It’s not unlike Richard Hosford’s with the Florestan Trio on these 
                Hyperion discs: flawlessly played with extraordinary command 
                over the instruments and superbly balanced by the engineers. The 
                BIS sound is caught even more closely and naturally (warts – if 
                that’s what you want to call key-clicking and breathing noises 
                – and all), and Fröst manages more hushed pianissimo phrases. 
                Neither, however, have the beautiful long, unhurried lines that 
                Karl Leister manages – either in his 1968 recording on DG (with 
                Christoph Eschenbach and Georg Donderer) or on Nimbus (just re-issued 
                on Brilliant Classics) with Berlin Philharmonic colleagues Ferenc 
                Bognár and Wolfgang Boettcher. Hyperion would have had another 
                option for this set, too: Thea King with Clifford Benson and 
                Karine Georgian (Hyperion CDA66107) – who deliver 
                a performance rivaled in warmth only by Stoltzman/Ax/Ma on the 
                classic Sony recording. But even amid an embarrassment of choices, 
                Hosford/Florestan stand their ground proudly and give little reason 
                why their version shouldn’t be anyone’s first choice.  
              
For those who cherish Dame Thea King, good news comes with the Clarinet 
                Quintet and the Clarinet Sonatas. The Gabrieli String 
                Quartet and Mme. King deliver a splendid, unified performance. 
                Instead of string quartet and a dominating quartet, they are five 
                equal players where King’s warm clarinet is just one of five voices. 
                Especially in the first movement it’s surprisingly humble, bordering 
                self-effacing – fans of extroverted playing will have to look 
                elsewhere. The competition is similar to the above: Stoltzman 
                with the Tokyo Quartet (RCA), (better than the Tokyo 
                Quartet with Joan Enric Lluna on Harmonia Mundi), one of the many 
                Leister recordings (on DG with the Amadeus Quartet, on Brilliant 
                with the Brandis, or – perhaps most compelling – with the Vermeer 
                Quartet on Orfeo). Add to that Sabine Meyer with the ABQ (EMI), 
                Herbert Stähr and the Berlin Philharmonic 
                Octet members (Philips) and you have half a dozen 
                alternatives that (nearly) reach the heights of King & Co 
                who compare well even against my current favorite – Paul Meyer 
                and the Capuçon brothers on Virgin (where 
                it is the filler to a mildly disappointing Brahms double concerto). 
                King is every bit as good in the Sonatas (still available on a 
                low-mid priced Helios CD), and the competition largely the same: 
                Stoltzman/Goode (RCA), Fröst/Pontinen (BIS), Leister/Oppitz (Orfeo) 
                and especially a newcomer from Harmonia Mundi USA with Jon Manasse 
                and Jon Nakamatsu. King’s tone is beautiful, accurate – like Manasse’s 
                – but more clear, more assertive than the latter’s. Turn it around 
                and you have Manasse with a soft (yet haze-free), round tone the 
                like of which I have rarely heard. Together with the similarly 
                inclined Jon Nakamatsu, he emphasizes a bit more than King: Slow 
                and moderate movements are a bit slower, fast, lively movements 
                a bit faster. Both recordings are excellently recorded and well 
                balanced – Thea King’s clarinet slightly ‘behind’ the piano, Manasse’s 
                right on top of it.  
              
Arriving at the Cello Sonatas I am inclined to say: “finally” 
                a recording where direct comparison leaves room for critical remarks. 
                Steven Isserlis’s first recording for Hyperion – with Peter Evans 
                – is included here, and while they are relatively vigorous performances 
                - often Isserlis is too bland, too careful for me - in the usual 
                splendid sound, I miss the assertive glory of Rostropovich/Serkin (DG), 
                or the warm musicality and glow of Starker/Sebők (my favorite 
                recording – Mercury), or the virtuosity put to such good use in 
                the first Ma/Ax recording (1984 RCA, not 1991 Sony). Steven Isserlis 
                didn’t have the Feuermann Stradivarius cello in his hands when 
                he made this recording in 1984 (it belonged to Aldo Pariso until 
                1996), which is probably why he remade them with Steven Hough 
                some twenty years later. Longer cello lines, a more subdued - 
                not to say monotonous - air, better, more individual, independent 
                pianism, and a still richer sound mark the latter recording - 
                an improvement only in some ways.  
              
The matter is different with the three Violin Sonatas: Krysia 
                Osostowicz and Susan Tomes may offer the least name recognition 
                among the artists on this box-set, but their Violin Sonatas (1990) 
                have been my beloved favorite ever since I bought them on Hyperion’s 
                Helios sub-label. I simply love their touching and melodious way 
                with the music. No pair of musicians that I’ve heard plays these 
                works so naturally, with such musical unobtrusiveness, as they 
                do – which is why I favor them over all the competition that aims 
                more for virtuosity and pronounced dynamics. Listening to it is 
                like witnessing chamber music in the moment of being created, 
                rather than ‘interpreted’. Absolute control over their instruments 
                is a given, anyway, with these artists. The F-A-E Scherzo in c-minor 
                has been tacked on for the sake of completism – Mme. Osostowicz 
                recorded it with Simon Crawford-Phillips just this May 2008. Other 
                favorites of mine, like Suk/Katchen 
                (Decca), Dumay/Pires (DG), and Capuçon/Angelich 
                (Virgin), bring me great joy, too. But if I had to keep one, it’d 
                be Osostowicz/Tomes.  
              
I approached the final disc – the viola transcriptions of the 
                op.120 sonatas and the clarinet trio – with some trepidation. 
                Not my favorite works to begin with, and less so with the viola. 
                But at least the viola-bias is an attitude attained from relatively 
                limited, not always pleasurable, exposure. At the ARD competition 
                Sergey Malov played op.120/1 very well, indeed – hearing Lawrence 
                Dutton (of Emerson Quartet fame) in both works was less enjoyable 
                a few years back. Fortunately Lawrence Power - violist of the 
                Nash Ensemble and the Leopold Trio - is more than 
                up to the challenge and manages dark, unfussy readings that I 
                found not just bearable but even enjoyable. My memories of Zukerman/Barenboim 
                on DG are vague, but negative; of Shlomo Mintz/Itamar 
                Golan (Avie) vaguely neutral, of Kim Kashkashian with Robert Levin 
                a rare case of delight (ECM). Maxim Rysanov (with Katya Apekisheva) 
                on Onyx isn’t coming out in the US until November 2008, but that 
                disc will include the viola transcriptions of the Horn Trio and 
                the first Violin Sonata, and might be interesting for anyone looking 
                specifically for those works. While it would not be my first choice bought individually, 
                Power with Simon Crawford Phillips and cellist Timothy Hugh leave no complaints, 
                ending this twelve-disc set on a high point (this disc was individually 
                reviewed on MusicWeb by Michael Cookson).  
              
Looked 
                  at - and listened to - as a set, the merits are much higher, 
                  still, than “leaves no complaints”. Even if the DG and Philips 
                  sets were still available - which they currently are not - they 
                  wouldn’t be a threat to Hyperion’s – merely competition. DG 
                  has some spectacular highlights with the Rostropovich/Serkin 
                  Cello Suites and the Italiano/Abbado Piano Quintet. But even 
                  DG has stronger performances of some of the other works in their 
                  own catalog that are not included on the compilation: The Hagen 
                  Quartett with Gérard Caussé in the String Quintets and Emil 
                  Gilels with the Amadeus Quartet (or Argerich ‘with friends’) 
                  in the First Piano Quartet, for example. Philips has the Beaux 
                  Arts Trio, who were caught at the height of their powers and 
                  are particularly effective in the Piano Quartets with violist 
                  Walter Trampler. The Cello Sonatas with Sebok and Starker are 
                  my – emotional - favorite, anyway, and Sebők/Grumiaux are 
                  fine in the Violin Sonatas. But the clarinet works and the String 
                  Quartets - the Quartetto Italiano on auto-pilot - are not top 
                  drawer.
                
              
The Hyperion box’s 
                less than brilliant spot - weakness would be too strong a word 
                - is probably the disc with the Cello Sonatas. Perhaps a missed 
                opportunity in not having been generous and thrown in Isserlis’ 
                new recording with Stephen Hough … though, in all honesty, even 
                then I would still recommend supplementing your collection with 
                either “Slava” or Starker. Brilliant Classics has a box out (see 
                review), and it’s as complete as Hyperion’s. It happens to 
                be one of the strong points of their complete Brahms box (which 
                runs about the price of the Hyperion Chamber Works) and should 
                not be dismissed. But Hyperion’s excellent interpretations are 
                added by extraordinary production value – not the least the exceptionally 
                well engineered recordings that offer a continuity of great sound 
                that Brilliant’s pick-and-patch collection can’t match. Differences 
                individual tastes will inform the choice between the sets – but 
                with at least a dozen performances that are my favorites even 
                on individual discs, the Hyperion set is my pick among the bunch.
                
                Jens F. Laurson  
                
                  
                Full Track-listing  
                  
                CD1  
                String Sextet No 1 in B flat major, Op 18 
                 
                1 Movement 1: Allegro ma non troppo [10'50]
                2 Movement 2: Andante, ma moderato [10'04]
                3 Movement 3: Scherzo. Allegro molto [2'51]
                4 Movement 4: Rondo. Poco allegretto e grazioso 
                [10'18]  
                The Raphael Ensemble  
                String Sextet No 2 in G major, Op 36  
                
                5 Movement 1: Allegro non troppo [14'39]
                6 Movement 2: Scherzo. Allegro non troppo [7'11]
                7 Movement 3: Poco adagio [9'28]
                8 Movement 4: Poco allegro [8'32]  
                The Raphael Ensemble  
                
                  
                CD2  
                String Quintet No 1 in F major, Op 88  
                
                1 Movement 1: Allegro non troppo ma con brio 
                [11'45]
                2 Movement 2: Grave ed appassionato – Allegretto 
                vivace – Tempo I – Presto – Tempo I [11'39]
                3 Movement 3: Allegro energico – Presto [4'58]
                The Raphael Ensemble
                String Quintet No 2 in G major, Op 111  
                
                4 Movement 1: Allegro non troppo ma con brio 
                [12'42]
                5 Movement 2: Adagio [6'16]
                6 Movement 3: Un poco allegretto [5'33]
                7 Movement 4: Vivace ma non troppo presto – Animato 
                [5'06]  
                The Raphael Ensemble  
                
                    
                
                CD3  
                String Quartet in C minor, Op 51 No 1  
                
                1 Movement 1: Allegro [11'08]
                2 Movement 2: Romanze. Poco adagio [7'17]
                3 Movement 3: Allegretto molto moderato e comodo 
                – Un poco piů animato [8'50]
                4 Movement 4: Allegro [6'05]  
                New Budapest Quartet  
                String Quartet in A minor, Op 51 No 2  
                
                5 Movement 1: Allegro non troppo [12'28]
                6 Movement 2: Andante moderato [9'20]
                7 Movement 3: Quasi menuetto, moderato – Allegro 
                vivace [5'02]
                8 Movement 4: Allegro non assai [6'43] 
                 
                New Budapest Quartet  
                
                  
                CD4  
                String Quartet in B flat major, Op 67  
                
                1 Movement 1: Vivace [9'10]
                2 Movement 2: Andante [7'24]  
                3 Movement 3: Agitato, Allegretto non troppo 
                [7'55]
                4 Movement 4: Poco allegretto con variazioni 
                [10'36]  
                New Budapest Quartet  
                Piano Quintet in F minor, Op 34  
                
                5 Movement 1: Allegro non troppo [15'42]
                6 Movement 2: Andante, un poco adagio [8'54]
                7 Movement 3: Scherzo. Allegro [7'40]
                8 Movement 4: Poco sostenuto – Allegro non troppo 
                – Presto non troppo [10'43]  
                Piers Lane (piano), New Budapest Quartet  
                
                  
                CD5  
                Piano Quartet No 1 in G minor, Op 25  
                
                1 Movement 1: Allegro [13'53]
                2 Movement 2: Intermezzo. Allegro ma non troppo 
                – Trio. Animato [7'58]
                3 Movement 3: Andante con moto [9'45]
                4 Movement 4: Rondo alla Zingarese. Presto [8'05] 
                 
                Marc-André Hamelin (piano), Leopold String Trio 
                 
                Piano Quartet No 3 in C minor, Op 60
                5 Movement 1: Allegro non troppo [10'56] 
                 
                6 Movement 2: Scherzo. Allegro [4'12]  
                
                7 Movement 3: Andante [9'21]  
                8 Movement 4: Finale. Allegro comodo [10'24] 
                 
                Marc-André Hamelin (piano), Leopold String Trio 
                 
                  
                CD6  
                Piano Quartet No 2 in A major, Op 26  
                
                1 Movement 1: Allegro non troppo [16'25]  
                
                2 Movement 2: Poco adagio [12'28]  
                3 Movement 3: Scherzo. Poco allegro – Trio [11'04] 
                 
                4 Movement 4: Finale. Allegro [10'10]  
                
                Marc-André Hamelin (piano), Leopold String Trio 
                 
                    
                
                CD7  
                Trio in B major for piano, violin and cello, 
                Op 8  
                1 Movement 1: Allegro con brio [14'51]
                2 Movement 2: Scherzo. Allegro molto [6'18]  
                
                3 Movement 3: Adagio [8'03]  
                4 Movement 4: Allegro [6'28]  
                The Florestan Trio  
                Trio in E flat major for piano, violin and 
                horn, Op 40  
                5 Movement 1: Andante – Poco piů animato [7'39] 
                 
                6 Movement 2: Scherzo. Allegro [6'39]
                7 Movement 3: Adagio mesto [6'44]  
                8 Movement 4: Finale. Allegro con brio [6'17] 
                 
                The Florestan Trio, Stephen Stirling (horn), 
                Anthony Marwood (violin), Susan Tomes (piano)  
                  
                CD8  
                Trio in C major for piano, violin and cello, 
                Op 87  
                1 Movement 1: Allegro [9'26]
                2 Movement 2: Andante con moto [7'33]
                3 Movement 3: Scherzo. Presto [4'23]  
                
                4 Movement 4: Finale. Allegro giocoso [5'58] 
                 
                The Florestan Trio  
                Trio in C minor for piano, violin and cello, 
                Op 101  
                5 Movement 1: Allegro energico [7'07]
                6 Movement 2: Presto non assai [3'31]
                7 Movement 3: Andante grazioso [4'04]
                8 Movement 4: Allegro molto [5'17]  
                The Florestan Trio  
                Trio in A minor for piano, clarinet/viola 
                and cello, Op 114  
                9 Movement 1: Allegro [8'10]
                10 Movement 2: Adagio [8'00]
                11 Movement 3: Andantino grazioso [4'34]
                12 Movement 4: Allegro [4'35]  
                The Florestan Trio, Richard Hosford (clarinet), 
                Richard Lester (cello), Susan Tomes (piano)  
                    
                
                CD9  
                Clarinet Quintet in B minor, Op 115  
                
                1 Movement 1: Allegro [12'53]
                2 Movement 2: Adagio [11'56]
                3 Movement 3: Andantino – Presto non assai, ma 
                con sentimento [4'44]
                4 Movement 4: Con moto [8'50]  
                Dame Thea King (clarinet), Gabrieli String Quartet 
                 
                Sonata in F minor for clarinet/viola and piano, 
                Op 120 No 1  
                5 Movement 1: Allegro appassionato [7'35]
                6 Movement 2: Andante un poco adagio [4'48]
                7 Movement 3: Allegretto grazioso [4'20]
                8 Movement 4: Vivace [5'02]  
                Dame Thea King (clarinet), Clifford Benson (piano)
                
                CD10  
                Cello Sonata No 1 in E minor, Op 38  
                
                1 Movement 1: Allegro non troppo [10'52]  
                
                2 Movement 2: Allegretto quasi menuetto [5'45] 
                 
                3 Movement 3: Allegro [6'13]  
                Steven Isserlis (cello), Peter Evans (piano) 
                 
                Cello Sonata No 2 in F major, Op 99  
                
                4 Movement 1: Allegro vivace [8'32]
                5 Movement 2: Adagio affettuoso [7'05]
                6 Movement 3: Allegro passionato [6'46] 
                 
                7 Movement 4: Allegro molto [4'23]  
                Steven Isserlis (cello), Peter Evans (piano) 
                 
                Sonata in E flat major for clarinet/viola 
                and piano, Op 120 No 2  
                8 Movement 1: Allegro amabile [8'05]
                9 Movement 2: Allegro appassionato [5'12]  
                
                10 Movement 3: Andante con moto – Allegro non 
                troppo [7'24]  
                Dame Thea King (clarinet), Clifford Benson (piano)
                  
                CD11  
                Violin Sonata No 1 in G major, Op 78  
                
                1 Movement 1: Vivace ma non troppo [10'36]  
                
                2 Movement 2: Adagio – Piů andante – Adagio come 
                I [8'01]  
                3 Movement 3: Allegro molto moderato – Piů moderato 
                [8'07]  
                Krysia Osostowicz (violin), Susan Tomes (piano) 
                 
                Violin Sonata No 2 in A major, Op 100  
                
                4 Movement 1: Allegro amabile [8'16]
                5 Movement 2: Andante tranquillo – Vivace – Andante 
                – Vivace di piů – Andante – Vivace [6'25]
                6 Movement 3: Allegretto grazioso, quasi Andante 
                [5'02]  
                Krysia Osostowicz (violin), Susan Tomes (piano) 
                 
                Violin Sonata No 3 in D minor, Op 108  
                
                7 Movement 1: Allegro [7'56]
                8 Movement 2: Adagio [4'52]
                9 Movement 3: Un poco presto e con sentimento 
                [2'43]
                10 Movement 4: Presto agitato [5'24]  
                
                Krysia Osostowicz (violin), Susan Tomes (piano) 
                 
                Sonata in A minor 'F-A-E'  
                11 Movement 3: Scherzo in C minor, WoO2 [5'17] 
                 
                Krysia Osostowicz (violin), Simon Crawford-Phillips 
                (piano)  
                  
                CD12  
                Sonata in F minor for clarinet/viola and piano, 
                Op 120 No 1  
                1 Movement 1: Allegro appassionato [7'43]  
                
                2 Movement 2: Andante un poco adagio [4'54]  
                
                3 Movement 3: Allegretto grazioso [3'59]  
                
                4 Movement 4: Vivace [5'00]  
                Lawrence Power (viola), Simon Crawford-Phillips 
                (piano)  
                Trio in A minor for piano, clarinet/viola 
                and cello, Op 114  
                5 Movement 1: Allegro [7'50]
                6 Movement 2: Adagio [7'19]
                7 Movement 3: Andantino grazioso [4'15]
                8 Movement 4: Allegro [4'20]  
                Lawrence Power (viola), Simon Crawford-Phillips 
                (piano), Tim Hugh (cello)  
                Sonata in E flat major for clarinet/viola 
                and piano, Op 120 No 2  
                9 Movement 1: Allegro amabile [8'12]
                10 Movement 2: Allegro appassionato [4'57]
                11 Movement 3: Andante con moto – Allegro non 
                troppo [6'35]  
                Lawrence Power (viola), Simon Crawford-Phillips 
                (piano)