Why are there penguins 
                on the front cover, inside the case 
                and on the label? Presumably for the 
                same reason that there is a row of seats 
                on the cover of the Nash Ensemble’s 
                version of the Mendelssohn Piano Trios 
                (ONYX 4011). Three seats for the trios, 
                six penguins – the male members of the 
                Nash Ensemble in their ‘penguin suits’? 
                – for the sextets; not exactly the most 
                subtle of visual puns. This may seem 
                a trivial criticism but I can easily 
                imagine looking at the cover of this 
                disc in a shop and putting it down as 
                not a serious contender. 
              
 
              
My next problem was 
                that the sound is rather recessed at 
                the outset, with the ensemble a little 
                too distant. This is better than too 
                forward a sound and the ear soon adjusts. 
                Partly it is of the nature of these 
                sextets that with two cellos the sound 
                is warm rather than bright – indeed, 
                it is a cello theme which opens the 
                First Sextet – but I do think that the 
                recording slightly over-favours the 
                lower end of the sound spectrum. Perhaps, 
                too, the recording engineers were trying 
                to avoid the slight blaring in forte 
                passages which Michael Cookson noted 
                in his review of the Mendelssohn Trios 
                on this site in November 2006. Otherwise 
                he found the recording, made at the 
                same venue, decently balanced and reasonably 
                clear. 
              
 
              
In the booklet Joanna 
                Wyld makes the case for linking both 
                works to Brahms’s tangled relationships 
                with Agathe von Siebold, his first love, 
                and Clara Schumann, whose husband had 
                died three years before the first Sextet; 
                Brahms had adopted the role of Clara’s 
                protector and their relationship had 
                begun to assume the on-off nature which 
                characterised it thereafter. 
              
 
              
Having urged the case 
                recently for a connection between Schubert’s 
                final illness and the mood of his String 
                Quintet, it may seem perverse to minimise 
                this element of the Sextets but more 
                important for me is the crisis in Brahms’s 
                creative life. The notes mention this, 
                but do not pursue it. His Piano Concerto 
                No.1 had not made the impression he 
                had hoped for and it was to be some 
                time before he returned to the concerto 
                form. For the time being he seems to 
                have been afraid to compose in any format 
                that could be interpreted as an attempt 
                to emulate the great musical successes 
                of his predecessors, especially Beethoven 
                and his late friend Schumann. When he 
                did finally commit himself to the First 
                Symphony, the big tune of the finale 
                caused it to be dubbed ‘Beethoven’s 
                tenth’, raising the very comparison 
                that Brahms had tried to avoid; his 
                attempt to pass the matter off with 
                a joke – that any ass could see the 
                similarity – may well have hidden his 
                true feelings. 
              
 
              
He avoided for the 
                time being the chamber music forms associated 
                with Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert 
                or Schumann, but none of his great predecessors 
                had attempted a Sextet. The First Sextet 
                is similar in its range of moods, and 
                in its employment of a second cello, 
                to the Schubert String Quintet, which 
                had received its posthumous first public 
                performance in 1850, but neither Brahms’s 
                andante ma moderato second movement 
                nor the poco adagio of the Second 
                Sextet matches the intensity of the 
                adagio of the Schubert. 
              
 
              
The Nash Ensemble face 
                strong competition in these works, with 
                an excellent version from the Raphael 
                Ensemble, fine performances from the 
                ASMF Chamber Ensemble, the augmented 
                Lindsay Quartet and Hausmusik, and a 
                recommendable bargain version from Menuhin 
                et al. Setting aside my reservations 
                about the sound, the new disc offers 
                very fine performances, but it is not 
                quite ideal. 
              
 
              
Most of the members 
                of the Nash Ensemble are well-known 
                soloists but here the keynote is smoothness 
                and integration – six instruments playing 
                as one. This is, of course, a virtue, 
                but I could have welcomed a little more 
                individuality. The beginning of the 
                First Sextet is a case in point: the 
                opening cello theme is answered by the 
                first violin and first viola but the 
                impression that the Nash Ensemble give 
                is of a corporate entity answering itself, 
                rather than an interplay of individuals. 
                The credits in the booklet and on the 
                rear cover emphasise the role of the 
                Nash Ensemble’s Artistic Director, Amelia 
                Freedman, CBE, FRAM; perhaps there has 
                been a little too much external direction 
                in this case. One hardly imagines Joachim, 
                the leader at the first performance 
                in 1860, integrating himself in quite 
                this way. Of course, the tension between 
                the rich overall sound and the individual 
                contributions is bound always to be 
                a consideration but the effect of homogeneity 
                from the Nash Ensemble is enhanced by 
                the failure of the recording to locate 
                the individual instruments as clearly 
                as most modern chamber-music recordings. 
                Even listening on headphones, which 
                usually produces exaggerated separation 
                in listening to chamber music, does 
                not entirely focus the sound sonically 
                or spatially. 
              
 
              
The Ensemble resist 
                the temptation to wring too much emotion 
                out of the andante ma moderato 
                of the First Sextet or the poco adagio 
                of the Second Sextet. In both these 
                movements they are slightly brisker 
                than the Raphael Ensemble (9:40 against 
                9:58 and 8:50 against 9:24) but there 
                was no sense of hurry in either movement; 
                indeed, throughout, the tempi which 
                they adopt seem well-justified. 
              
 
              
There is much to admire 
                and to enjoy in these performances but, 
                for me, admiration rather than enjoyment 
                is the keynote. The technical excellence 
                of the Nash Ensemble can be taken for 
                granted and they capture the varying 
                moods of these two works very well. 
                I feel that I should respond more positively 
                to both the performances and the recording 
                – I know that others have called both 
                exemplary and I cannot imagine anyone 
                being seriously disappointed – yet I 
                cannot recommend this as the best available 
                version. Perhaps part of the problem 
                is that these are not my favourite Brahms 
                chamber works. I fully concur with those 
                who point to the elegant, effortless 
                and dignified playing, but I also feel 
                the slight lack of individuality to 
                which I have referred and I attach more 
                significance to the lack of differentiation 
                in the recording than do those who note 
                it but consider it comparatively unimportant. 
                In all fairness I should add that these 
                more positive reactions to the performance 
                and recording can be found on the Onyx 
                website. 
              
 
              
To end on a positive 
                note, the finale of the Second Sextet 
                closes the CD in just the right way. 
                The Nash Ensemble really capture the 
                carefree, skittish yet graceful air 
                of the movement – they seem more willing 
                to take chances than in the earlier 
                movements – and the recording captures 
                their most delicate nuances. If the 
                whole disc had been of this quality, 
                it might have been an outright winner. 
              
 
              
With repeated hearings 
                my reservations about the Nash Ensemble 
                performance and recording diminished, 
                especially when I stopped scoring points 
                and sat back just to listen, but the 
                Raphael Ensemble (Hyperion CDA66276) 
                seem a safer recommendation – and their 
                cover artwork, depicting the lake of 
                Thun, certainly wins the day over those 
                penguins. The cover of the Menuhin version, 
                with its bisected and fragmented painting 
                is almost as quirky as the Onyx: EMI 
                Encore 5 74957 2. With all repeats observed, 
                the Onyx is a well-filled CD, but so 
                is the Hyperion. Try the RealPlayer 
                sample of the Raphaels’ scherzo 
                of Sextet No.1. For those who prefer 
                period instruments, Colin Clarke on 
                this site in April 2004 found the Hausmusik 
                performances (Signum SIGCD013) more 
                satisfying than the London Concertante 
                version of the Second Sextet which he 
                was reviewing. 
              
Brian Wilson