  | 
            | 
         
         
          |  
               
            
   
            
 alternatively 
              CD: AmazonUK 
              AmazonUS 
              
            | 
           
             Anton EBERL (1765-1807) 
              Trio in B flat, for fortepiano, violin and cello, op.8 no.2 (1798) 
              [26:19] 
              Potpourri en Trio in E flat, for fortepiano, clarinet and cello, 
              op.44 (1803) [11:56] 
              Grand Sextet in E flat, for fortepiano, violin, viola, cello, clarinet 
              and horn, op.47 (1800) [30:56] 
                
              Trio Van Hengel (Nicole van Bruggen (clarinet); Thomas Pitt (cello); 
              Anneke Veenhoff (fortepiano)); Alida Schat (violin); Vappu Helasvuo 
              (viola); Bart Aerbeydt (horn) 
              rec. Old Catholic Church, Delft, South Holland, April 2009 and March 
              2010. DDD 
                
              RAMEE RAM 1103 [69:15] 
           | 
         
         
          |  
            
           | 
         
         
           
             
              
                Another CD, another neglected composer of genius. Austrian 
                  Anton Eberl was very highly regarded by his contemporaries in 
                  his grievously short life, being widely considered the equal 
                  of Mozart, Haydn and the young Beethoven, alongside whose Sinfonia 
                  Eroica Eberl's own E flat Symphony was premiered - and 
                  by at least one critic deemed superior! Several of Eberl's 
                  piano works were even published as by Mozart, something which 
                  Eberl and Constanze Mozart fought to rectify. As late as 1944 
                  Eberl's Symphony in C was heralded in Italy as a new 
                  Mozart discovery. 
                    
                  Sadly, much of Eberl's music is lost, but what remains 
                  is, on the evidence of the few recordings available to date, 
                  of the highest quality, not least the selections performed by 
                  the Trio Van Hengel and friends, on this disc and its companion, 
                  released on Ramée in 2006 (RAM 0601). Unfortunately, the Trio's 
                  founding cellist Bas van Hengel died shortly after that recording, 
                  his position now assumed by Thomas Pitt. 
                    
                  Dating from only a fistful of years after his music was often 
                  considered stylistically inseparable from Mozart's, the 
                  three works in this programme showcase a now wholly original 
                  talent, and in opp. 44 and 47 a modernist of similar cut to 
                  Johann Hummel. This really is excellent music: as deep as it 
                  is broad, brimming with vigour, poetry, harmony and brilliance. 
                  Factor in the unusual, but delightful colourings of the hugely 
                  imaginative Grand Sextet, the thrilling bravura yet delicate 
                  expressiveness of the Potpourri en Trio, and the Mozartean lyricism 
                  of the B flat Trio - in the finale Eberl pays tribute to his 
                  deceased friend with a brief paraphrase from The Magic Flute 
                  - and the result is seventy minutes of musical heaven. 
                    
                  The fortepiano in this recording is a six-octave 1810 Mathias 
                  Müller restoration, and its adorable tone is almost worth the 
                  asking price of the CD on its own. When elegantly played by 
                  someone of Anneke Veenhoff's artistry, it accentuates 
                  the undeniably progressive leanings in Eberl's music, 
                  not just the Romantic vision, but also his big-handed, fleet-fingered 
                  exploitation of the entirety of the keyboard in a manner that 
                  went well beyond Mozart. Nicole van Bruggen's clarinet 
                  is just as delectable in the Potpourri and Sextet, but whether 
                  six soloists or three, the ensemble music-making here is of 
                  the highest order. 
                    
                  Sound recording is very good too. The trilingual CD booklet, 
                  housed in an attractively designed digipak case, is a paragon 
                  of well-written, detailed information, expertly translated into 
                  English - many labels would benefit greatly from following this 
                  model. A single misprint has the two Symphonies by Eberl and 
                  Beethoven referred to above as being in B flat rather than E 
                  flat. 
                    
                  This is already sure to be one of the best releases of 2012. 
                    
                  Byzantion 
                  Collected reviews and contact at reviews.gramma.co.uk 
                   
                 
                                          
                  
                  
                  
                  
                 
                   
                 
                 
             
           | 
         
       
     
     |