I have always felt that Brahms’ String Quintets have been the poor relations 
      in the company of the rest of his chamber works. They certainly seem to 
      be programmed and recorded less. Why this is so eludes me as they are both 
      very fine works. Furthermore, the G major Quintet, Op. 111 I consider one 
      of his greatest works. Composed eight years apart they follow the Mozartian 
      rather than the Schubertian model, employing two violas rather than cellos. 
      In this way, there was greater scope to endow the first viola part with 
      more solo writing. He greatly admired the chamber music of Haydn, Mozart, 
      Beethoven and Schubert and felt that it was his mission to carry on from 
      where they left off. Perhaps it is significant that he was so conscious 
      of the high standards set by his predecessors that he destroyed many of 
      his early string quartets.
       
      The first quintet in F major, Op. 88 was composed in Ischl near Salzburg, 
      where Brahms spent ten of his summers. Despite being in the habit of disparaging 
      his own compositions on many occasions, the quintet had him writing to his 
      publisher Simrock ‘you have never before had such a beautiful work 
      from me’ and to his friend Clara Schumann, he also sang its praises.
       
      In 1890 Joachim, the great violinist and dedicatee of Brahms’ violin Concerto, 
      urged the composer to write a companion quintet to go with the F major. 
      By this time, Brahms had been seriously contemplating ‘retiring’, feeling 
      that his creativity was drying-up. To his friend Eusebius Mandyczewski, 
      he expressed his concerns and disillusion: ‘I’ve been tormenting 
      myself for a long time with all kinds of things … and nothing will come 
      of it … it’s not going the way it used to. I’m just not going to do 
      any more.’ Certainly, the completion of the G major Quintet, he regarded 
      as his farewell to composition. Fortunately this was not to be and, over 
      the next seven years before his death in 1897, he composed, amongst other 
      things, the Clarinet trio and Quintet, the Opp. 116-119 piano pieces and 
      the two Clarinet sonatas. Like the earlier work, the G major Quintet was 
      also composed in Ischl and given its premiere by the Rose Quartet. Being 
      on a larger scale with four movements (the F major has three), the work 
      displays virtuosic string writing, outshining any of his other chamber works. 
      Perhaps his confidence was buoyed up by the successful instrumental writing 
      of the Double Concerto, composed three years before, in 1887.
       
      From the opening bars of Op. 88 the Uppsala Chamber Soloists show a great 
      affinity for this music. The beautiful first subject is warm, tender and 
      expressive. Tempi are well judged and phrasing and dynamics are such that 
      the drama is allowed to unfold in a natural way. The second movement is 
      unusual in that Brahms divides it into three contrasting sections. In the 
      first section which is marked Grave, the Uppsala players capture 
      the reflective, wistful quality of the melody. Their beauty of tone is second 
      to none. The allegretto and presto sections are light 
      and playful and provide an effective contrast. The finale is invigorating 
      and ebullient.
       
      The highlight of this disc is the G major Quintet Op. 111, for the simple 
      fact that it is one of my favorite chamber works. Having several versions, 
      I did a head-to-head to compare the different performances in my collection. 
      The opening of the Quintet is breathtaking in its exuberance. Joachim, when 
      he first saw the score, saw the opening as too orchestral, with the tremolos 
      of the upper strings threatening to drown out the wonderful soaring melody 
      of the solo cello. Brahms was determined that the opening should stand as 
      it is, knowing the effect he wanted to achieve. The Berlin Philharmonic 
      players on Philips (446172) nearly drown out the poor cellist. Their overall 
      performance seems to me uninspiring. The Melos Quartet with Gérard Caussé 
      (viola) on Harmonia Mundi (901349) perform only the G major Quintet. As 
      a whole the sound throughout is slightly congested and lacks the clarity 
      accorded to the Uppsala players. The Amadeus (DG 474358) inexplicably omit 
      the first movement exposition repeat which Brahms specifies. The Raphael 
      Ensemble (Hyperion CDH 55369) have provided the ideal recording and one 
      which I have returned to many times. I did not think they could be bettered; 
      that is until now. The Uppsala players definitely outshine them and have 
      dislodged them from their pedestal. The sound here is brighter and more 
      immediate. This allows the sometimes thick instrumental textures to emerge 
      with great clarity and definition. Everything seems just right. Tempi, dynamics 
      and phrasing are well judged. Intonation and ensemble marks the performances 
      out with distinction.
       
      The acoustic of the Kulturhuset i Ytterjarna is warm and sympathetic. Booklet 
      notes are comprehensive in English, German and Swedish. Perhaps the String 
      Quartets and Sextets in the future - who knows?
       
      Stephen Greenbank
       
      Benchmark recordings of the two Brahms’ String Quintets from Sweden.
    
       
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