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Camille SAINT-SAËNS (1835-1921)
Piano Quartet in B flat major (1875) [31:45]
Barcarolle in F major (1897) [9:09]
Piano Quintet in A minor (1854-55) [30:08]
Cristina Ortiz (piano)
Fine Arts Quartet
rec. Concert Hall, Performing Arts Centre, Purchase College, State University
of New York, Purchase NY, 26-29 March 2012
NAXOS 8.572904 [71:02]
My colleague Ian Lace already named this album Recording
of the Month and praised the “charm[ing]” and “gorgeously
evocative” chamber music of Camille Saint-Saëns. It’s
showcased here but hard to find elsewhere. I don’t feel very
creative agreeing with him on every point, but I do. The motion is
seconded: Saint-Saëns’ chamber music is unjustifiably overlooked,
a source of great pleasure, and we should be glad that such fine performers
are now its champions.
This is the Fine Arts Quartet’s second Saint-Saëns album,
after his string quartets, which I also
enjoyed, but maybe not this much. The early piano quintet, written
when the composer was escaping his teenage years, is ambitious but
wholly enjoyable, with evocations of Mendelssohn. There’s a
tune in the first movement that sounds coincidentally like the opening
of the later piano quintet by Dvorák. The andante, with slightly
greater harmonic daring and a direct tie to the scherzo, is to me
the highlight.
The late piano quartet, the composer’s second - a companion
CD featuring the first must be in the offing? - is truly superb in
a romantic sort of way, beauty its aim and its strength. The work’s
not untroubled by drama, but the composer’s French side shows
through, with writing reminiscent of Fauré and an epic finale.
Although the work is in B flat, every movement but the first starts
in a minor key. The barcarolle is as good as Ian Lace said it was:
a gentle rocking motion in the viola and cello joined by evocative
piano writing and some of the big tunes this composer for which is
both great and under-appreciated.
The Fine Arts Quartet is one of the best ensembles around at creating
a luxurious romantic atmosphere, with all four players capable of
making their instruments sing, sing, sing. To this full-bodied quartet
add the able pianism of Cristina Ortiz, a pairing which has already
proved delightful in Fauré and Franck, and satisfaction is
basically guaranteed. Excellent sound makes this a treat for all those
who enjoy the byways of the romantic era.
Brian Reinhart
See also review by Ian
Lace (April 2013 Recording of the Month)
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