Fauré Chamber Works

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Gabriel Fauré

Label: Philips

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 53

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: 422 350-2PH

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Quartet for Piano and Strings No. 1 Gabriel Fauré, Composer
Beaux Arts Trio
Gabriel Fauré, Composer
Kim Kashkashian, Viola
Piano Trio Gabriel Fauré, Composer
Beaux Arts Trio
Gabriel Fauré, Composer
Faure may still not be the best known composer of chamber music, but this issue with two of his major works tells us yet again what a good one he was. The excellent craftsmanship we may take for granted, but although he did not wear his heart on his sleeve there is a real passion in this writing too, as the surging opening movement of the C minor Piano Quartet (written in his early thirties) reminds us. Performers need to convey this while remaining within the bounds of his civilized language, and it seems to me that he is in good hands with the Beaux Arts Trio and Kim Kashkashian. The overall shape and flow of the musical thought is presented clearly and yet no expressive detail escapes these artists, and an initial movement that can seem discursive never loses urgency here although there is no sense of hurry either. The wry humour of the scherzo is tautly presented too, not least in the trio where dry piano arpeggios neatly set off the strings' more expansive phrases, while in the Adagio we rightly have a deeper mood (although, as always, a little reticent) that suggests romantic young hearts beating vigorously beneath well-tailored nineteenth-century clothing. The finale at once establishes a mood of agitation and mystery, so that this elusive composer seems to pose questions and then leave them unanswered.
The Gramophone Award-winning performance for Hyperion by Domus is also finely expressive, and fleeter too in the scherzo and especially the finale, but I find the new issue still more stylish and compelling. On EMI, Dumay, Lodeon and Collard are much more overtly dramatic than the other ensembles and have been given a full, immediate sound, but ultimately I think they rather overstate Faure's score.
The D minor Piano Trio is a shorter work that Faure completed in 1923, over 40 years later than the Piano Quartet, but although his utterance here is more elliptical it is no less rewarding. Peter Wiley's cello solo at the start is rightly interrogatory, and in some ways it sets the tone for much of what follows, quietly touching music that sticks in the mind, and if the playing in this work may occasionally seem understated that is not a serious fault. The recording made in The Maltings, Snape offers mellow string sound while having impact where necessary, although in the Trio the piano seems to me occasionally boxy. The more explicitly passionate Dumay, Lodeon and Collard on EMI play well in this Trio. The sound is better managed than in the Piano Quartet too, while they also bring out the contrast between movements well. Like the Piano Quartet, their performance is available only as part of a mid-price two-disc set, while this new Philips issue makes for a welcome coupling.
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