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		    Robert SCHUMANN (1810-1856)
200th Anniversary Box - Chamber Music
 Piano Quintet in E flat Op.44 [29:37]
 String Quartet no.1 in A minor Op.41 no.1 [27:41]
 String Quartet no.2 in F Op.42 no.2 [22:39]
 String Quartet no.3 in A Op.41 no.3 [31:18]
 Piano Quartet in E flat Op.47 [29:16]
 Andante and Variations Op.46 [18:33]
 Märchenerzählungen for clarinet, viola and piano Op.132 [15:30]
 3 Romanzen Op.94 for clarinet and piano [12:27]
 5 Romanzen Op.95 for clarinet and piano [12:27]
 Fantasiestücke Op.73 [12:05]
 Adagio and Allegro Op.70 [9:03]
 Märchenbilder Op.113 [16:00]
 Violin Sonata No.2 in D minor Op.121 [35:32]
 Piano Trio No.1 in D minor Op.63 [33:00]
 Piano Trio No.2 in F Op.80 [27:45]
 5 Stücke im Volkston for cello and piano Op. 102 [18:51]
 
  Christian Zacharias (piano) (Op.44); Cherubini-Quartett (Opp. 41, 44); Alexandre Rabinovich (piano) (Opp. 46, 47, 70); Dora Schwarzberg (violin) (Opp. 47, 121); Nobuko Imai (viola) (Opp. 47, 113); Natalia Gutman (cello) (Opp. 46, 47); Martha Argerich (piano) (Opp. 46, 113, 121); Mischa Maisky (cello) (Op. 46); Marie-Luise Neunecker (horn) (Opp. 46, 70); Mikhail Rudy (piano) (Opp. 102, 132); Gérard Caussé (viola) (Op. 132); Michel Portal (clarinet) (Opp. 94, 132); Grieg Trio (Opp. 63, 80); Boris Pergamenschikow (piano) (Op. 102) rec. 1989-1996, various locations. DDD
 
  EMI CLASSICS 50999 6 09011 2 5   [5 CDs: 57:04 + 54:11 + 77:07 + 67:45 + 79:37]   |   
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                 My guess is that anybody contemplating this purchase is more 
                  likely to be doing so to fill gaps in their Schumann collection 
                  than out of admiration for the work of the various artists featured. 
                  With that in mind, a more comprehensive survey would surely 
                  serve them better. Why, for example is only one of the Violin 
                  Sonatas (the 2nd) included and only the first two 
                  of the piano trios? And why is so much space given over to such 
                  trivial items as the Op.102 '5 Stücke im Volkston' or the 'Märchenbilder' 
                  Op.113? 
 As with many of the recent EMI reissue box-sets, the performers 
                  here form two distinct groups: the big names like Argerich and 
                  Gutman, usually performing live, and younger ensembles, captured 
                  either right at the start of their careers or soon after their 
                  signing to EMI. Unless you are reviewing the discs you are unlikely 
                  to be listening to them all in one sitting, so the issues of 
                  interpretive, acoustical and technological inconsistency are 
                  unlikely to jar for you as much as they have for me. In fairness 
                  though, these recordings only span eight years, from 1989 to 
                  1996, and the only real disjunction in the sound quality is 
                  between the studio and the live recordings.
 
 The Piano Quintet is given a serviceable enough reading by Christian 
                  Zacharias and the Cherubini-Quartett. Personally, I like performances 
                  of chamber music with piano where the pianist strives for balance 
                  and ensemble, which is just what we have here. More senior pianists 
                  have a tendency to insist that they are always right at the 
                  front of the texture and that the strings act as accompaniment, 
                  whatever the music looks like. But Zacharias has the humility 
                  to present the work as true chamber music. Some of the more 
                  dramatic passages, like the openings of the outer movements 
                  for example, could do with a little more fire, but there is 
                  plenty of energy here, and good ensemble in the strings. All 
                  in all, it's a good opener.
 
 The String Quartets, which are also played by the Cherubinis, 
                  are less impressive. There are tuning problems right from the 
                  beginning of no.1, and all hope of that just being a shaky start 
                  to an otherwise worthwhile reading are soon dispelled. The 2nd 
                  is the worst of them, with both the ensemble and the tuning 
                  regularly going astray. The reason? Who knows. The ensemble 
                  demonstrate in the Piano Quintet that they are capable of better 
                  things. It is surprising that EMI couldn't find a better recording 
                  of these works in their archives.
 
 Skipping to disc 5, we find the equally youthful Grieg Trio 
                  in far better form in the 1st and 2nd 
                  Piano Trios. Theirs is a different Schumann in many ways; their 
                  phrasing and rubato are more indulgent, and their ornaments 
                  are more florid. The sound favours the violin and piano right-hand 
                  over the cello and piano bass lines, but otherwise these are 
                  very fine recordings. The 1st Piano Trio in particular 
                  poses a series of interpretive issues, particularly in the way 
                  that the music suddenly changes tempo or dynamic between sections, 
                  but the Grieg Trio take all this in their stride and make it 
                  all work. For me they are the highlight of the set, but what 
                  happened to Piano Trio no.3?
 
 Most of the other works involve more senior players, and Martha 
                  Argerich is a significant and valuable presence in most of them. 
                  She is not in the Piano Quartet Op.47 though, the pianist here 
                  being Alexandre Rabinovitch. However, with Nobuko Imai on viola 
                  and Natalia Gutman on cello there is no shortage of celebrity 
                  talent. It is bit lacklustre this one, and I couldn't help the 
                  feeling that it would be a more exciting performance had Argerich 
                  been involved. She joins a similar line-up for the Andante and 
                  Variations Op.46, the one work in this set that really deserves 
                  the status of neglected masterpiece. The instrumental requirements 
                  have no doubt contributed to its absence from the concert hall, 
                  requiring as it does two pianos, two cellos and horn. It is 
                  a wonderful and satisfyingly wayward piece though, and well 
                  worth a listen.
 
 Most of the rest of the running time is given over to works 
                  for solo instrument and piano. Among the pianists, Argerich 
                  makes the greatest impression (no surprise there) while the 
                  top soloist title should probably be awarded jointly to violist 
                  Nobuko Imai and horn player Marie-Luise Neunecker. The latter 
                  has incredible presence, even in the five instrument Andante 
                  and Variations, and brings a real German horn sound, both to 
                  that work and to the Adagio and Allegro Op.70.
 
 In sum, this is yet another mixed bag of a reissue from EMI. 
                  The inconsistency of recording technology and interpretation 
                  is not as acute as in some of their recent box sets, but it 
                  is still the case that the composer himself is the only significant 
                  thread that runs through the five discs. Her name is not given 
                  much prominence in the packaging, but the star performer is 
                  Martha Argerich, who seems wholly incapable of creating anything 
                  mediocre. Part of her secret is working with top name performers, 
                  people like Natalia Gutman or Mischa Maisky, who would be unlikely 
                  to engage in chamber music projects for anybody else.
 
 The other three sets issued by EMI Classics to celebrate the 
                  200th anniversary of Schumann’s birth are Piano (6090472) 
                  Orchestral (6090372 - see review) 
                  and Lieder 6090222.
Seeing that the present release is largely an exercise in repackaging, the packaging itself deserves attention, and I have to say I find it wanting. The info in the liner is adequate enough, and Nicholas Marston is given plenty of space to fill us in on the context in his specially commissioned essay. But the box itself is dreadful. It is one of those double CD jewel cases that has been adapted for five discs. It is ugly, difficult to use and exceedingly fragile. So how about a move to card boxes with individual slip cases like Hyperion box sets? That would be far more elegant, easier to use, and would take up significantly less shelf space.
 
 Gavin Dixon
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