Of the nine completed works of Johannes Brahms
which in one way or another set out to be symphonies, this Opus
114, if orchestrated, would have formed a nice quartet of "light"
symphonies with Opp. 11, 16 and 73. His decision at the age of
58 to work it up as a clarinet trio followed a period of despair
during which he felt all composed out, and was partly due to his
acquaintance with clarinettist Mühlfeld and partly to his
stylistic transition towards neo-classicism.. The same connection
also gave us the Clarinet Sonatas and the Quintet.
One can hardly quarrel with that decision. The work as it stands
is utterly marvellous. The third movement andantino grazioso
is as much an uncanny pre-echo of the scherzi to Mahler’s Second
Symphony twelve years in the future, as it is a lingering
taste of Liebeslieder. This is a performance without anguish,
beautifully played and recorded.
Hugh Wood was born in Ligam, Lancashire, studied
with Anthony Milner, Iain Hamilton, and Mátyás Seiber,
and taught for some years at Cambridge. He has been quite active
as a composer with several important commissions in various forms.
The Clarinet Trio veers between Schoenberg and Berg — and
Seiber, but is unusually accessible and actually enjoyable for
the most part.
Some of Beethoven’s early chamber music is embarrassingly
derivative and some is really good, this Trio being one of the
latter. The performers bring it off in grand style.
A little more grit in the Brahms and I would
have given this one the highest recommendation.
Paul Shoemaker
See also
review by Raymond Walker