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Wolfgang
Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791)
Complete Piano Trios
CD1
Divertimento KV 254 in B major (1776) [17:06]
Piano Trio KV 496 in G major (1786) [27:22]
Piano Trio KV 502 in B major (1786) [25:10]
CD2
Piano Trio KV 542 in E major (1788) [18:29]
Piano Trio KV 548 in C major (1788) [18:39]
Piano Trio KV 564 in G major (1788) [17:18]
Trio Stradivari
(Jolanda Violante (fortepiano); Federico Guglielmo (violin);
Luigi Piovano (cello))
rec. CD1: Chiesa di S.M. Annunciata, Sovizzo Colle (Vicenza),
November 2005; CD2: Studio Magister, Preganziol (Treviso),
February 2006
CPO 7772732 [69:38
+ 54:26] |
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Mozart’s piano
trios are not as prominent in Mozart’s chamber output as his
ingenious string quintets or the string quartets, but they
are utterly lovely works that never really fail to charm. They
have been well served by a host of good recordings: The Beaux
Arts Trio is, rightfully, a classic. The magnificent Florestan
Trio has recorded them on two discs (Hyperion),
and so did the Trio
Parnassus (MDG).
That’s daunting
competition, and this CPO release with the Trio Stradivari
competes for its spot on your shelf not by trying to better
the above, but by offering the trios in performances on original
instruments. That’s what the Trio 1790 did for CPO on their
very fine Haydn Piano Trio traversal, offering the original
instrument spice to the Beaux Arts Trio’s sumptuous old-school
beauty.
The Trio Stradivari
amiably plays its way through the five Piano Trios and the
Divertimento KV254 in B minor with an element of honest rawness
in their sound that might be found gripping and intimate. Of
course it might just as well be thought of as craggy and unrefined.
That can, in part, be blamed on the nature of the beast that
is Historically Informed Performance. But HIP need not mean
tinny sound and intonation issues. Fortunately, the Trio Stradivari
suffers from neither of these. But they do sound clangy in
a way that only true HIP-fans will find as adding to this music,
rather than subtracting.
In the Allegretto of
the E major Trio, Mme. Violante goes on to show that she is
a formidable pianist who can produce precisely the kind of
pebbly sparkle where the fortepiano has an advantage over the
modern concert grand. Yet none of the slow movements – and
surely not for lack of skill on her part – are as touching
as when Menahem Pressler or Susan Tomes caress their instrument.
Detailed comparison
with modern instrument is ultimately futile here. The differences
are too stark, the fortepiano sound too brittle, and the strings
not sweet and warm enough to make this palatable to those looking
for Mozart as exemplified by the above-mentioned alternatives.
What about HIPsters,
then? Well, there is competition here, too – and that makes
the difference between the Trio Stradivari recording being
keenly appreciated (as an alternative reading), and superfluous.
And as long as the wonderful original instrument recording
of the Mozartean Players - available on two budget “Classical Express” discs
or as part of Harmonia Mundi’s lavish, mid-price Mozart
Anniversary Edition - is around, the Italians will be a
second choice. The “Mozartean” Steven Lubin, playing a copy
of a Walter fortepiano, produces a tone that is still distinct
period sound, but together with his colleagues he continually
manages to inject a joy into these performances, that Mozart
skips, dances, and flows along very happily. Indeed, so happily
that the Mozartean Players are a sure recommendation for period
and non-period Mozart-lovers alike.
CPO’s recorded
sound is pleasantly neutral, the liner-notes very good, and
the English translation thereof reasonably idiomatic. Though
that is how he preferred to be called, giving the composer’s
name as Wolfgang Amadé Mozart has an unnecessarily self-conscious
touch to it.
Jens F. Laurson
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