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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
OLD FAVOURITE, NEW NONENTITY,
By DAVID BRYSON (Glossop Derbyshire England) - See all my reviews (TOP 500 REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Schubert, Spohr: Octets / Wiener Octet (Audio CD)
This recording of Schubert's octet was made in 1958, that of Spohr's in 1959. I bought the LP of the Schubert as soon as I first saw it reviewed, and I own it to this day. It was a favourite of mine from the first time of putting it on the turntable, and it is a favourite still, which is not something I could say of all my early choices, much though I agonised over them and budgeted for their purchase. This is a heavenly piece of music, and a heavenly performance of it. The recording, which was good for its time, seems to have been freshened up a little. No dramatic improvements in the sound-quality were needed, and thankfully the producers have not tried to be clever in any unwanted ways. Schubert's octet is a miracle of instrumental sound. It shows an acute sense for the distinctiveness of the three wind-instruments in particular - even Tovey, for whom Beethoven possessed attributes more commonly ascribed to deity than to composers, says with admirable candour that Schubert understood the clarinet better than his idol did. You will find all Schubert's little marvels of tone-colour presented with a natural and unforced understanding in this performance - the clarinet melody in the adagio when the key changes and the music suddenly seems deeper in mood and more formidable, the violins in the theme of the andante, the theatre-orchestra effect in the introduction to the last movement, and above all the celestial tune of the minuet's trio section with its wonderful scoring for violin and bassoon. The tempi are absolutely right from beginning to end also, and one has the sense that this Vienna Octet were born and destined to perform this most Viennese of all composers.
Spohr's octet is new to me, although I own a fine performance on vinyl of his nonet. The octet doesn't seem to me the equal of that work, which is in effect for a mini-orchestra. Still less is it any kind of rival to Schubert's octet. It is a much smaller effort for one thing, and I don't find myself particularly convinced by the experiment it represents in scoring and tone-colouring. The instrumentation is for violin, two violas, cello, double bass, two horns and clarinet. I must say that sounded promising, and I expect it would have fulfilled its promise if the composer had been Schubert or Brahms or Strauss. From Spohr the effect disappointed me, and I'm convinced that's the fault of the work itself and not of the players who give it every last ounce of t-l-c. I surmise it wouldn't sound much different if rescored for, say, double string quartet like Mendelssohn's octet. Spohr was compared by Tovey with Hummel to the latter's disadvantage, but I'd have to say that my own experience of both (admittedly limited) would lead me to the opposite view. Still less do I understand at this late date how Spohr came to be mentioned in the same breath as the greatest by W S Gilbert - `...masses and fugues and ops,/And Bach interwoven/With Spohr and Beethoven/At classical Monday pops.' Nevertheless as a novelty extra with a performance of Schubert that I would have had to own at any price I suppose it's very welcome, and the recording is up to that of Schubert's too. The liner-note is sound, workmanlike and relevant, which is more than I can often say. The front of the leaflet shows the original members of the Vienna octet in one of those group poses that no group ever adopted in real life. The back of the leaflet has, I am delighted to say, the picture that has been on the sleeve of my LP for the best part of 50 years, so that will ease the pain of parting with it now that it has become supernumerary.
15 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Schubert's Hospitality,
By Mark S. Rosselot (Arlington, VA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Schubert, Spohr: Octets / Wiener Octet (Audio CD)
I liked this CD the first time that I heard it, and I appreciated it more the more I times that I played it. It's the kind of CD that I can play every day, several times a day, and not grow tired of it. When I listen to it I sometimes feel as though I have walked a long way in the snow, been invited into Schubert's house, been given dry clothes, been seated in front of a pile of burning logs, been given a warm drink, and am enjoying conversation with my best friends, one of whom is this wonderful host named Franz Schubert. The music is consistently congenial, and the Viener Oktet play beautifully, each instrument contributing its charming part to this most pleasant experience. Don't be surprised if after listening to it you later find yourself whistling some of its melodies as you walk down a street.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A most idiomatic Schubert,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Schubert, Spohr: Octets / Wiener Octet (Audio CD)
Among many interpretations of Schubert's great Octet, a piece which saw him in great serenity, the Wiener Octet is famous for his wonderfully idiomatic line.
The magic poetry of this piece is expressed with unhurried elegance, with noble charme, with a heavenly smile. Having listened to many, the Academy Chamber Ensemble on Chandos is another winner, but this Decca take from the early stereo age, now reissued on 24 bit, is in a league of its own. I am buying a DAC and I will write on how this disc plays on a DAC which is 24 bits capable. Definitely one of the ten essential CDs of any classical collection, both for the heavenly poetry of the interpretation and for a legendary Decca engineering.
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