This cracking release brings together two of Enescu’s most brilliant, yet neglected, chamber music compositions.
He attempted writing a piano quartet in 1893, aged
twelve, when the young violinist and composer was already a well-established
student at the Vienna Conservatoire. His first mature and complete piano
quartet, op.16, only followed in 1909 by which time Enescu had transferred to
Paris to continue his studies. An early performance was given at Ravel's
newly-established Société Indépendante Musicale on 18 May 1910 with Enescu at
the piano. The piano quartet is a lengthy work that has sometimes been
criticised for not deliberately advancing Enescu's compositional style, but its
generosity of expression, thematic material and warm mood peppered with
purposeful contrasts offer ample compensations to the listener and makes it
deserving of a far wider audience. Throughout, one senses Enescu the
composer-architect at work, concerning himself with structural balance and
sonata form as integral elements that build and shape his musical edifice.
Unsurprisingly, given his Parisian surroundings, various French influences are to
be detected.
The opening Allegro moderato at times can sound
rather like Chausson, given that the piano part is filled out with tremolo and
arpeggio figures, and the movement's lengthy, inexorable fugal elaboration owes
much to Fauré, but the unison opening strikingly gives prominence to Enescu's
Romanian musical roots; recall similarly narrative passages in the Octet or
First Orchestral Suite, for example. The closing coda is noteworthy also for
the intricacy of its construction. The second movement is sparsely scored, as
befits the marking Andante Mesto, mesto meaning 'sad'; Enescu heightens
the effect through rhythmic ambiguity. Fauré again casts a shadow, but
discernibly with an Enescuvian turn of phrase, thus bringing matters to a head
before subsiding. The closing Vivace brings welcome humour to the
proceedings; the strings are once again in unison whist the piano makes
pointedly abrupt contributions to impart a Bachian feel momentarily. The middle
section contrasts at length through its lyricism, before elements from both
sections are woven together by way of conclusion.
The Piano Trio in A minor is one of three compositions he completed in 1916. Apparently written at speed within a month – the final movement is dated 22 March, when Enescu was in a Bucharest hospital – the work remains without an opus number. The opening Allegro Moderato’s notable feature is a real Enescu hallmark: marrying rhapsodic feeling within a tightly structured sonata form. The Allegretto con Variazioni, the last formal set of variations Enescu wrote, begins with less harmonically demanding writing that is closer in flavour to the piano suite. However much of the material given by the violin and cello is quite depressing, with the listeners invited to witness something akin to a Marche Funebre. In contrast to many other of his wartime works, here the emotional atmosphere of the times fully breaks through into Enescu’s writing. The closing Vivace amabile sees a return to the happier mood that imbues the opening movement in music that is replete with freshness and sparkle.
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