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Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828)
Rondo for piano duet in D, D608 [10:17]
Sonata in B-flat, D617 (1824) [20:58]
Fantasie in f minor for piano duet, D940 (1828) [20:02]
Rondo for piano duet in A, D951 (1828) [12:43]
Duo in a minor, Allegro ‘Lebensstürme’, D947 (1828) [12:50]
Duo Pleyel [Richard Egarr, Alexandra Nepomnyashchaya (fortepiano, Pleyel 1848)]
Pitch a’=441 Hz.
rec. Kapel op ‘t Rijsselt, Eefde, The Netherlands, 1–3 February 2019. DDD.
Reviewed as lossless (wav) press preview.
LINN CKD593 [77:11]

Schubert’s piano duos, especially those from his final years, are among his finest works. Here they are presented in company with two earlier pieces for the same combination. There’s no lack of recordings at all prices, but no two recordings contain exactly the same coupling. In this case, I thought it a shame that Linn didn’t run to a second CD and include the Grand Duo in C, D812, as Erato did with the recordings by Anne Queffélec and Imogen Cooper. The Grand Duo is on such a large scale that it was once thought to have been a preliminary sketch for the ‘lost’ Gastein Symphony, which is now believed to have been the ‘great’ C major, No.7 or No.9 depending on which system you follow.

Having said that, I see that Warner replaced that 2-CD set with a single Apex release, formerly a budget price CD and now a more expensive download, offering D940, D947 and other works (0927498122). The two ex-EMI Gemini twofers, from Christoph Eschenbach and Justus Frantz, which together give the fullest selection of these duos, are also download only, but still priced effectively as a budget twofer, around £11 each in lossless sound. Even more complete, Caroline Clemmow and Anthony Goldstone offer almost nine hours of Schubert Duos on Divine Art (DDA21701 – CDs around £35, lossless download varies from £15.99 to around £67!).

As the blurb for this Linn release aptly states, ‘Schubert’s great F minor Fantasie, although justly famous, represents only a small proportion of his music for piano four-hands’. There are more than 30 such works, and I do hope, therefore, that Linn will give us more from this source.

Queffélec and Cooper (Apex) and Eschenbach and Frantz (Gemini x2) offer the music on a modern piano. The Duo Pleyel, appropriately, have recorded it on a Pleyel fortepiano of 1848, a little later than the music but closer to what Schubert would have heard than any modern instrument. Fortepiano haters should read no further, but those with a more open mind are unlikely to be put off by what they hear. The top end is a little clattery and the bass end a little too prominent at times, but the innocent ear soon adjusts.

It’s the three late works that will attract attention to this recording. The Duo Pleyel give plenty of room for these works to expand. That’s true of the Fantasie, where they take a little longer than Paul Lewis and Stephen Osborne (Hyperion CDA67665: Recording of the Month – review) or Queffélec and Cooper, though there’s never any sense that the performance lacks energy as well as imagination. It’s not just the choice of instrument which lends itself to the slightly slower timing: Andreas Staier and Alexander Melnikov, on a Graf fortepiano, take the Fantasie slightly faster overall (Harmonia Mundi HMM902227 – review).

Simon Thompson, who reviewed the Harmonia Mundi, is no great fan of the fortepiano, an instrument that has won me over in recent years, but his chief concern about that recording of the Fantasie is the failure to respond to all the very varied aspects of the work. It is, indeed, a very varied piece, but the Duo Pleyel do adapt themselves to its varied moods – even better than Queffélec and Cooper, hitherto my version of choice. I think that even fortepiano haters might find themselves hearing through the sound of the instrument into the heart of the music in this recording. At times, you feel that the music is stretching the instrument to its limits – think of those pianos with broken strings in the Beethovenhaus in Bonn – but never quite to destruction.

The Rondo, D951, interjects a note of happier times between the two stormy works. Even here, however, there’s none of the cheer of a Mozart Rondo and, once again, the performance brings out the varied aspects of the music. Here too, as in the Fantasie, the Duo Pleyel give the music a little more time to expand than Queffélec and Cooper.

The very title of the Lebensstürme duo (the storms of life) which rounds off the recording reminds us that Schubert’s last years were lived under the shadow of an illness which he must have been aware was terminal. The booklet reminds us of his extraordinary ability to compose one work after another, but the notes also refer to the sense of deep sadness and pathos in the music, as reflected in the quotation: ‘Every night when I go to bed, I hope that I may never wake again, and every morning renews my grief.’

Loth as I am to take the historicist attitude to literature and music too far, it’s very tempting to read such comments into Schubert’s late works – those here, the C major String Quintet, D956, and the posthumous Piano Sonata No.21, D960. On the other hand, the Octet, D803, one of Schubert’s sunniest works, was also composed at a time of mental and physical pain in 1824 and many of the letters which he wrote as late as the Spring and Summer of his final year, 1828, suggest that he was in high spirits.

Lebensstürme may not have been Schubert’s nomenclature, but the work lives up to its name from the beginning, and this performance leaves the listener in little doubt of that. This time Egarr and Nepomnyashchaya are a little faster in this work than most, yet here, as in the Fantasie, they capture the different moods which it encompasses, with no sense of hurry in the reflective passages. On Hyperion Lewis and Osborne come in considerably - almost three minutes - slower, at 15:35, with Evgeny Kissin and James Levine (RCA 82876692832) not far behind at 15:16.

Timings don’t lie, but the fact is that Egarr and Nepomnyashchaya never seem to hurry the music; Kissin and Levin actually sound faster for much of their journey through this work. Much as I share the general appreciation of the RCA recording, not least for its inclusion of the Grand Duo, I enjoyed the new Linn equally. Clemmow and Goldstone, on Divine Art, capture the energy of the music but rather underplay the reflective elements, while Lewis and Osborne, though far from neglecting the energetic passages, bring out the reflective elements. In the case of such a multi-faceted personality as Schubert, it’s inevitable that recordings will tend to reveal some aspects more than others.

The main considerations in choosing a recording of these duos are the inclusion by Kissin and Levin of the Grand Duo, along with the Fantasie and Lebensstürme, together with some shorter pieces, and your attitude to the fortepiano. If you must have the Grand Duo, the RCA recording is download only, 85 minutes originally running to two CDs, at around £11 in lossless sound, but without booklet. Some dealers are offering the CDs second-hand. If you have another recording of the Grand Duo and are prepared to tolerate the fortepiano, there is every reason to choose the Linn recording. For those who really must have the modern piano, but don’t need the Grand Duo, Lewis and Osborne provide a very fine alternative.

I listened to them via the lossless download, available, with pdf booklet, from hyperion-records.co.uk for £8; the CD is available there for the same price, so the choice of medium is yours. That recording also comes with a most appropriate cover from a painting by Caspar David Friedrich and, even more to the point,Lebensstürme is accompanied by very fine accounts of the Fantasie and Rondo, as per the Linn recording, the Variations in A-flat, D813, and two shorter works.

The Linn recording quality is good, as are Richard Egarr’s notes, if slightly short in detail of the individual works and a little too inclined to link Schubert’s music and his health, but only a little – if there is one composer where it seems almost inevitable to make the connection, it must be Schubert. This is a very worthwhile addition to the many fine recordings of this four-handed music.

Brian Wilson



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