Bruch, Mozart, Schumann & Stravinsky: Clarinet Trios / Wigmore Soloists

Regular price $10.99
Label
BIS
Release Date
November 4, 2022
Format
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    Featuring
    • COMPOSER
      Max Bruch, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Robert Schumann, Igor Stravinsky
    • PERFORMER
      Michael Collins, Isabelle Van Keulen, Michael Mchale
    Product Details
    • RELEASE DATE
      November 04, 2022
    • UPC
      7318599925356
    • CATALOG NUMBER
      BIS-2535
    • LABEL
      BIS
    • NUMBER OF DISCS
      1
    • GENRE
    Works
    1. Trio No. 2 for Piano and Strings in E-Flat Major, K. 498 'Kegelstatt'

      Composer: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

      Ensemble: Wigmore Soloists

    2. Märchenerzählungen, Op. 132

      Composer: Robert Schumann

      Ensemble: Wigmore Soloists

    3. Pieces (8), Op. 83 (excerpts)

      Composer: Max Bruch

      Ensemble: Wigmore Soloists

    4. Histoire du soldat: Suite

      Composer: Igor Stravinsky

      Ensemble: Wigmore Soloists


As core members of the ensemble Wigmore Soloists, Michael Collins, Isabelle van Keulen and Michael McHale present four works for clarinet trio composed over a period of some 130 years. Mozart’s Kegelstatt Trio was long believed to have been composed during a game of bowling. The writing is reminiscent of a conversation between three friends in which contrasts are not excluded: we hear affection, divergences and even disagreements. This atmosphere of friendly, playful, and sometimes very intimate exchange also pervades Schumann’s Märchenerzählungen (Fairy Tales). While its spirited conviviality might give the impression that this work was the product of idyllic times, it was actually composed during Schumann’s last full year of sanity before his final mental collapse in 1854. There is a similar atmosphere of warm intimacy in Max Bruch’s Eight Pieces, written in 1910. Four of them are presented here, giving not a single hint of the approaching First World War. Based on a Russian folk tale, Stravinsky’s stage work L’Histoire du Soldat may be less good-natured than the preceding works. But the music is wonderfully entertaining, borrowing from various genres, including jazz. The composer’s trio version consist of five movements and has deservedly become his most frequently performed chamber composition.

REVIEW:

As expected, the performances are excellent. The Mozart is wonderfully lyrical; the Stravinsky crackles with energy; and the Schumann and the Bruch have the intensity and heartfelt phrasing the composers require. Collins leads with his clear and resonant timbre, dazzling fingers and articulation, and superb musicianship; and McHale lends splendid tone, touch, technique, and sensitivity. Van Keulen demonstrates terrific versatility all through, from warm contralto utterances to spunky fiddle playing, though sometimes her viola lines are a little thin and scrappy. Even so, the profound devotion to each score makes this album very worthwhile.

-- American Record Guide