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Schubert: Piano Trios Nos. 1 & 2 / Arpeggione Sonata / Nocturne for Piano Trio - Adagio, d. 821, 897, 898, 929
 
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Schubert: Piano Trios Nos. 1 & 2 / Arpeggione Sonata / Nocturne for Piano Trio - Adagio, d. 821, 897, 898, 929

Franz Schubert , Andras Schiff , Yuuko Shiokawa , Miklos Perenyi Audio CD
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Performer: Andras Schiff, Yuuko Shiokawa, Miklos Perenyi
  • Composer: Franz Schubert
  • Audio CD (July 14, 1998)
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Label: Teldec
  • ASIN: B000007RXO
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #334,909 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Disc: 1
1. Sonata for arpeggione & piano in A minor ('Arpeggione Sonata'), D. 821: Allegro moderato
2. Sonata for arpeggione & piano in A minor ('Arpeggione Sonata'), D. 821: Adagio
3. Sonata for arpeggione & piano in A minor ('Arpeggione Sonata'), D. 821: Allegretto
4. Piano Trio in B flat major, D. 898 (Op. 99): Allegro moderato
5. Piano Trio in B flat major, D. 898 (Op. 99): Andante un poco mosso
6. Piano Trio in B flat major, D. 898 (Op. 99): Scherzo & Trio, Allegro
7. Piano Trio in B flat major, D. 898 (Op. 99): Rondo, Allegro vivace
Disc: 2
1. Piano Trio in E flat major ('Nocturne') (Adagio only), D. 897 (Op. posth. 148)
2. Piano Trio No. 2 in E flat major, D. 929 (Op. 100): Allegro
3. Piano Trio No. 2 in E flat major, D. 929 (Op. 100): Andante con moto
4. Piano Trio No. 2 in E flat major, D. 929 (Op. 100): Scherzo & Trio, Allegro moderato
5. Piano Trio No. 2 in E flat major, D. 929 (Op. 100): Allegro moderato

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Exellent Music with perfect technique, June 12, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Schubert: Piano Trios Nos. 1 & 2 / Arpeggione Sonata / Nocturne for Piano Trio - Adagio, d. 821, 897, 898, 929 (Audio CD)
This is a wonderful CD for every Schubert lover, done by a musicians working together for a long time. I, as an amateur cellist, was especially moved by the exellent music with perfect technique of Perenyi. The sound is beautiful, interpretation persuasive, tempo stable but not tedious, and music expressive. I especially like his "Arpeggione Sonata." But it's not only his music and sound that is great. As a recording of Chamber music, "ensemble" must be the priority....and this is exactly what I appreciate so much. As a ensemble group, these three are one of the best. I hope as many musicians as possibe would share their well-done work.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful - a 1st choice performance, June 19, 2009
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This review is from: Schubert: Piano Trios Nos. 1 & 2 / Arpeggione Sonata / Nocturne for Piano Trio - Adagio, d. 821, 897, 898, 929 (Audio CD)
I cannot agree more with the sky reviewer - earlier. This performance of two Schubert's piano trios is truely sublime, musical and colorful. The sound is gorgeous and alive. This performance was also highly acclaimed by Gramophone as one of the best. Highly recommended. I absolutely love Schubert's Arpegionne Sonata. But, the best performance of this piece is Rostropovich/Britten's version on Decca's legendary performance. Just listen and you'll love it.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Consummate Schubert in every way - a must-listen, September 8, 2011
This review is from: Schubert: Piano Trios Nos. 1 & 2 / Arpeggione Sonata / Nocturne for Piano Trio - Adagio, d. 821, 897, 898, 929 (Audio CD)
These recordings from 1997 are so distinctive that it might be best to take them one at a time.

CD 1:
Arpeggione Sonata: Although written for a peculiar instrument (a sort of bowed guitar) that soon disappeared from sight, this sonata appears in the repertoire of every professional cellist and has been recorded by most. The beguiling melody in the first movement is one of Schubert's most haunting, and the whole work s infused with the magic of his wistful melancholy. The catalog number, D. 821, puts the score in the vicinity of another masterpiece with much the same atmosphere, the "Death and the Maiden"Quartet. As so often with Schubert, one would never expect that his personal life was filled with distress at the time - symptoms of syphilis and bouts of depression.

It's often pointed out that the main difficulty of the "Arpepeggione" is that it lies so high on the cello (the music sounds very different when played on the viola, but it somehow gains something just because of the extreme range demanded on the cello). Perenyi is fortunate in possessing a lovely high register, which he encompasses easily and nimbly. the cello is fairly faint this high up, and Schiff accommodates with a light, elegant touch. The result is very appealing, and although the version from Rostropovich on Decca with Benjamin Britten as accompanist is a classic, I am drawn to this more slender account. In its musicality and poise it could easily be a first choice.

In the Piano Trio no. 1 in B flat one notices how sunny the playing is form this group, with Schiff leading on piano in a summer mood akin to the "trout" Quintet. The pace is quick, the ensemble close-knit and compact. It's hard to resist this kind of controlled ebullience, although there are other very fine readings of this trio that lean more toward Beethoven's robustness (I'm thinking of the rousing recording by Istomin-Stern-Rose, which is outclassed so far as sound goes by this one). All the instruments sound natural, and the engineers have balanced them very well. When he plays solo Schiff has proved a restrained interpreter of Schubert - too much so for me - but he's energetic here while allowing for reflective asides when they crop up; Schubert is never devoid of them even at his most cheerfully extrovert.

One of the beauties of this performance is that the violin of Shiokawa (who is married to Schiff) and cello of Perenyi don't break out of the prevailing mood when they are given solos; the mood and atmosphere are consistent. the temptation to grab the limelight is resisted, and so the flow of Schubert's long lyrical lines is able to cast a spell. I usually find that chamber music played by three stars is preferable to long-established groups that have grown too used to each other. Here we get a nice balance between individual voices and togetherness. As in the "arpeggione," this could easily be a first choice in the trio.

CD 2:
The Notturno for piano trio is a single Adagio movement, and the catalog number, D. 897, moves us into Schubrt's last period, which evoked the mysterious deep sadness that comes, in his world, with the most sublime beauty. He produced scores that can never be fully fathomed. Schiff and company deliver a tender reading that doesn't lose its inwardness when the variations become more emphatic. The use of long protracted chords creates the same timeless feeling on a reduced scale, as the slow movement of the String Quintet in C. This reading is a model of graceful serenity.

The second Piano Trio, in E flat, carries a catalog number, D. 929, that brings us very close to the end of Schubert's major works, and it is most known for the haunting slow movement. The idiom isn't straightforward despite the key signature, which in Mozart signals good cheer and plain sailing. The E-flat Piano Trio, like the last three piano sonatas, provides unexpected juxtapositions of force and tenderness, loud public declamation and quiet intimate singing. Most ensembles take it to be a "bigger" work than the first trio, more imposing and perhaps, to its detractors, pompous. But I'm sure this is because the greatest works of music await great interpreters.

Schiff and company are very good at characterizing each shift in mood without losing the arc of the whole. I must admit that the last two movements of this work seem to fall off in melodic inspiration, and Schubert had reservations about the finale, based on a fairly insipid theme (rare for him), which he shortened considerably. Here we return to the original exposition repeat and all lost material restored. The result is a movement lasting nearly 20 min., but it was a good decision - late Schubert always works better if allowed to extend its full length, because the composer's "heavenly" sense of time is unique. The cheerful ditty upon which this movement rests is based on a triplet rhythm that has the effect of minimalism, so that more and more repetition creates a different response than conciseness can. This reading is so lively and alert that there's never a chance to be bored for a minute. Again, a reading that could easily be a first choice.

Given the beauty of everything here, it's a shame that the price is a bit steep on the used market. A cheaper route is to buy Warner's 9-CD collection of Andras Schiff's recordings; it has many other outstanding things as well, although only the disc devoted to Bartok's three piano concertos rises quite to this level.



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