Schubert; Schumann Works for Cello and Piano

Virtuoso and sensitive players who put themselves at the music's service

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Robert Schumann, Franz Schubert

Label: Avie

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 78

Mastering:

Stereo
DDD

Catalogue Number: AV2112

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Adagio and Allegro Robert Schumann, Composer
Antonio Meneses, Cello
Gérard Wyss, Piano
Robert Schumann, Composer
(3) Fantasiestücke Robert Schumann, Composer
Antonio Meneses, Cello
Gérard Wyss, Piano
Robert Schumann, Composer
(5) Stücke im Volkston Robert Schumann, Composer
Antonio Meneses, Cello
Gérard Wyss, Piano
Robert Schumann, Composer
Märchenbilder Robert Schumann, Composer
Antonio Meneses, Cello
Gérard Wyss, Piano
Robert Schumann, Composer
Sonata for Arpeggione and Piano Franz Schubert, Composer
Antonio Meneses, Cello
Franz Schubert, Composer
Gérard Wyss, Piano
As one listens to this engaging recital, with its excellent sound, it's difficult to remember that only one work, Schumann's Op 102, was originally for cello and piano. Meneses negotiates the Arpeggione Sonata's dauntingly high tessitura with no sense of strain, and the other Schumann sets, designed respectively for horn, clarinet and viola, sound like idiomatic cello music. He's a true virtuoso, as the fast passages in the Arpeggione and the third of the Märchenbilder amply demonstrate, but one never feels that he's presenting himself. The impression is rather that he's inviting us into Schumann's or Schubert's inner world, urbanely drawing attention, by means of subtle emphasis or change of colour, to all the music's incidental beauties.

Gérard Wyss, as an experienced Lieder accompanist, has a similar eye for illustrative detail; his touch is unusually sensitive, with chords always beautifully balanced, and his left hand gives exceptional vitality to the bass-lines. Wyss's and Meneses's view of the Schubert isn't as starkly melancholic as Queyras's and Tharaud's on their fine recent recording (Harmonia Mundi, 12/06); their performance is warmer and more communicative. The finale's minor-key episode in Hungarian style bubbles with vitality, in contrast to the tense, agitated mood portrayed by Queyras and Tharaud. Similarly, all the Schumann pieces are performed in an outgoing, friendly way; I especially enjoyed the first of the Stücke im Volkston, progressing from a light, playful start to sweeping romantic gestures, and the last of the Märchenbilder, sweet and tender, with an almost Mahlerian sense of regret and loss.

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