Wydawnictwo: Chandos
Nr katalogowy: CHAN 10914
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: wrzesień 2016
EAN: 95115191422
Nr katalogowy: CHAN 10914
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: wrzesień 2016
EAN: 95115191422
Saint-Saens / Chausson: Piano Quartets
Chandos - CHAN 10914
Wykonawcy
Schubert Ensemble:
Simon Blendis, Violin
Douglas Patterson, Viola
Jane Salmon, Cello
William Howard, Piano
Schubert Ensemble:
Simon Blendis, Violin
Douglas Patterson, Viola
Jane Salmon, Cello
William Howard, Piano
Utwory na płycie:
Camille Saint-Saëns (1835-1921):
Piano Quartet in B flat major, Op. 41
Ernest Chausson (1855-1899):
Piano Quartet in A major, Op. 30
Piano Quartet in B flat major, Op. 41
Ernest Chausson (1855-1899):
Piano Quartet in A major, Op. 30
In this eagerly-awaited new recording on Chandos, the Schubert Ensemble returns with a programme that has been in its repertoire for many years: the piano quartets by Saint-Saëns and Chausson.
It would be hard to find a more vivid demonstration of the variety of French music making in the last quarter of the nineteenth century than these two quartets, and the differences between them are all the more striking in that neither of them conforms wholly to the casual cliché of French music as being light, graceful, charming, and anti anything that might be classed as intellectual.
From Saint-Saëns’s witty and elegant Quartet in B flat major to Chausson’s relatively unknown, rhapsodic, and full-blooded Quartet in A major, the thirty-year old Schubert Ensemble reveals two extremes of the French romantic repertoire and here offers a rare, attractive, and diverse programme.
It would be hard to find a more vivid demonstration of the variety of French music making in the last quarter of the nineteenth century than these two quartets, and the differences between them are all the more striking in that neither of them conforms wholly to the casual cliché of French music as being light, graceful, charming, and anti anything that might be classed as intellectual.
From Saint-Saëns’s witty and elegant Quartet in B flat major to Chausson’s relatively unknown, rhapsodic, and full-blooded Quartet in A major, the thirty-year old Schubert Ensemble reveals two extremes of the French romantic repertoire and here offers a rare, attractive, and diverse programme.