Piano Quintet, op. 87 (
rec. Finchcocks Musical Museum, Goudhurst, Kent, 20-22 May 2013.
With a performance of Hummel’s Piano Quintet as
attractive and engaging as this, I wondered why the work isn’t better
known. The answer came through listening — I’ll tell you shortly
— to the coupling on this CD, the work it inspired, Schubert’s
Trout Quintet.
The Hummel is fun. It begins in dark-grained fashion, the first movement
built on the first four notes delivered by violin and piano. You don’t
have to listen long to realize Hummel was a pianist. The piano has the decorative
spotlight and much of the showmanship of the proceedings, yet violin, viola,
cello and double bass all have their moments and as a group make an effective
contrasting force. The apparent grimness of the opening soon gives way to
a second theme (tr. 1, 1:29) of more jubilant character. The piano’s
contribution adds another dimension in buoyant leaps. The development (5:53)
has the piano rhapsodizing and the strings move the movement’s opening
motif forward. Of greater interest is the coda in which the strings introduce
a new, warm, expansive theme (8:19) leading to even more generous expatiation
by the piano before a smouldering close.
I compared another period instrument performance, that by the Nepomuk Fortepiano
Quintet (Brilliant Classics 93203). This has a faster and crisper
Allegro
e risoluto assai, 9:47 against The Music Collection’s 11:06.
It’s neater, more urbane and classical, but I prefer the greater gutsiness
of TMC, its more evident rhythmic heft and a certain gnarled quality in
the period instruments.
Though titled
Minuet the second movement is really a Scherzo and
made a raw, biting one by The Music Collection. Yet with a suitably playful
violin solo tail to both sections, given something of a gypsy flavour in
its
sforzandi. I prefer the greater urgency of TMC’s account.
The Trio brings relief in its fluffy pirouetting, a kind of musical treading
water, and here TMC’s greater fluency is more entertaining. As the
Chandos booklet note makes no mention of this, you might think they’re
taking poetic licence in the Scherzo reprise when its first section is repeated
softly throughout yet there is no second section repeat. This is, however,
exactly as marked in the score.
The slow movement (tr. 3) is an opportunity for some sustained exploration
of melody which is what makes Schubert’s
Trout quintet more
memorable and with more of a soulful quality. Hummel has nothing like this.
His brief slow movement is all about setting atmosphere. We don’t
get a melody until 0:37, the piano decoratively musing in a way which made
me think of John Field’s nocturnes. This is all over by 1:32 and we’re
left with cascades of piano notes leading to a busy, purposeful finale.
At least TMC bring something of repose to the main body of the movement
where NPQ choose to embellish the cadences of the piano part from the outset
and press showily forward.
The finale (tr. 4) is a rondo of grim resolution but one which turns often
enough to hope, as at the opening of the second strain (0:14), to keep optimism
alive. Come the first episode (0:48) you listen agog at the demoniac flailing
of the piano’s hailstorm of running semiquavers, then admire the violin’s
entering into a dialogue and the lightening of mood. The second episode
(2:48) surprises with a joyful melody proposed by viola, taken up by violin
and then cello, with piano reduced to growling in the lower register. This
is all colourfully realized by The Music Collection in an account which
outclasses the Nepomuk Piano Quintet in its wilder mania and more flowing
cantabile.
In Schubert’s
Trout Quintet The Music Collection’s
performance is again full of character and points up the distinctiveness
of period instruments in music written for them. Schubert being a composer
for whom melody and harmony are more important than rhythm, I found myself
reflecting that Schubert sounds better on modern instruments, in particular
the modern piano. Nevertheless you appreciate in this performance that a
trill on the fortepiano is more difficult to execute. While on trills, there’s
a curiosity. In the third theme of the first movement (tr. 5) the violin
at 2: 46 doesn’t echo the piano’s trill at 2:34 as you might
expect, but this is as marked in the Bärenreiter urtext. TMC’s
first movement begins keen and assertive while its second theme (1:48) has
a pleasingly contented warmth and the exposition codetta (3:15) is lively.
This is cheery and accomplished playing with perceptible attention both
to clarity of presentation and balance of ensemble. I compared the 1997
period instrument account by Jos van Immerseel with L’Archibudelli
(Newton Classics 8802087). This is a faster
Allegro vivace, taken
at 12:17 against The Music Collection’s 13:40. I prefer its paradoxically
more relaxed quality owing to the greater flow and spontaneity of its horizontal
emphasis, albeit sometimes at the cost of its vertical dimension.
TMC’s slow movement (tr. 6) glows in cheerful and refined playing,
slightly jolted by the insistency of the piano’s ‘
fp’s
from 1:03. The second theme, contributed by viola and cello together (1:23)
has just the right dusky allure. The piano’s darting ascents and descents
in the third theme (2:04) attractively anticipate the portrait of the trout
in the fourth movement. Immerseel+ are, as ever, faster — their complete
performance takes 35:18 against TMC’s 39:49 — making this movement
rather insubstantial. You might like that and the
fps are smoother
but I’d rather have the more bittersweet quality of TMC’s second
theme.
There’s something of a foretaste of the trout too in the Scherzo,
but here the swimming in TMC’s account is highly disciplined. Their
playing is both vivacious and rigorous. The slender, delicate nature of
their Trio makes a nice contrast until the suddenly heavier passage in the
second section which is Schubert making sure they and we don’t overdo
the daydreaming. The Scherzo is marked
Presto and Immerseel+ are
faster, to lively, but for me, comparatively perfunctory effect. Their Trio,
however, is more wistful in its contrast.
The fourth movement’s theme is Schubert’s song
The trout,
followed by five variations and a coda, made explicit by Chandos giving
all these separate tracks. In Variation 1 the piano livens up the violin’s
opening presentation with trills and, unlike the first movement, the violin
responds in echoing with trills. Variation 3 is dominated by the brilliance
of the piano’s semiquaver runs. Variation 5, with a lovely reflective
cello, makes a telling winding down after the excitement of the day whereas
the
Allegretto coda finds violin and cello sharing the theme as
a second wind, perky and full of holiday bonhomie. Immerseel+’s greater
pace makes for a lighter trout darting in Variation 1. The piano has less
impact in Variation 3 while Variation 5, still relatively fast, sounds uneasy
in focus rather than winding down. The coda has a pleasingly blithe innocence.
After a quiet opening march, the focus of TMC’s finale (tr. 15) involves
the felicities of Schubert’s clarity of instrumental layering and
exchange of theme and accompaniment between piano and strings. This is particularly
notable after the rumbustious piano introduction of its second theme (1:24).
Immerseel+ are more festive and light-hearted and their second theme has
a more kaleidoscopic quality. They are more sparkling though TMC show considerable
verve. In general Immerseel+ are more spontaneous, TMC more studied, but
the Chandos recording has the more vivid presence.
Michael Greenhalgh
Masterwork Index:
Trout
quintet