Schubert’s music for 
                piano duo is a mixed collection of pieces, 
                with some substantial masterworks but 
                a good deal of what might be termed 
                ‘entertainment music’. This third volume 
                in the complete series promoted by Naxos 
                offers examples of each approach. 
              
 
              
There is no question 
                which of these works represents the 
                best music. The Fantasie in F minor 
                is one of the great Schubert pieces, 
                and is surely one of the greatest piano 
                duets ever written. While individual 
                movements from one or two of the solo 
                piano sonatas or impromptus might qualify 
                for the accolade of 'Schubert's finest 
                piano music', the effect of this Fantasie 
                as a whole is unique, its quality miraculously 
                sustained from first note to last. 
              
 
              
This is a scrupulously 
                prepared and well paced performance, 
                with both players bringing their artistry 
                to bear on the music. If there is a 
                criticism it is that there might have 
                been just a little more drama and variety, 
                and just a little more range to the 
                recorded sound. For while the Naxos 
                recording is perfectly good, it does 
                not have the clarity and depth of tone 
                that piano duet music needs in an ideal 
                world. It is perfectly acceptable, however, 
                and so is the performance. 
              
 
              
The remaining items 
                do not strive to attain the heights 
                of the Fantasie but they are all thoroughly 
                engaging and performed with great sensitivity. 
                The Variations, composed between 1818 
                and 1824, are particularly appealing, 
                their restricted range offset by their 
                relative brevity: ten minutes in total. 
                In his typically well researched insert 
                notes Keith Anderson mentions some doubts 
                about the authenticity of this particular 
                composition. But on hearing it in this 
                performance the case for it being by 
                Schubert seems convincing enough. 
              
Terry Barfoot