Judging this CD by 
                listening to the first few bars of the 
                Kreutzer Trio would risk sending it 
                to the shelf marked ‘musical wallpaper’. 
                A big mistake. True, the overall sound 
                of the Kreutzer does indeed conjure 
                up an elegant cocktail party, the mellifluous 
                blend of flute and clarinet against 
                an elegant guitar accompaniment creating 
                the perfect background to civilized 
                conversation. And none the worse for 
                that. 
              
 
              
With all respect to 
                the easy listening of history (Victorian 
                salon piano music, the ilk of Coates 
                and German, lounge jazz), the Classical 
                period’s stock of banal phrases, predictable 
                harmonies and simple-minded accompaniments 
                puts it in a class of its own. Kreutzer 
                made full use of this toolbox in his 
                Grand Trio (why ‘Grand’?) and the result 
                is charming and undemanding. It is also 
                beautifully played by this unusually-constituted 
                ensemble for which there seems to be 
                a fairly limited original repertoire. 
                A pity, because the blend of the two 
                wind instruments works better over the 
                contrasting plucked strings of the guitar 
                than they might over the soft hammers 
                of a piano, particularly a modern grand. 
              
Fortunately, there 
                is far more to this CD than background 
                for a dinner party. Campo’s Preludes, 
                written in memory of friends who died 
                in a fire, is a serious work written 
                for this combination. In its span of 
                merely seven minutes, it is melancholy 
                and agitated with a painfully acidic 
                vocabulary suggesting the flickering 
                of the murderous fire. The flute and 
                clarinet intertwine with precision tuning, 
                often without vibrato for agonising 
                effect. A modern but completely comprehensible 
                musical language is artfully used to 
                create a coherent and affecting whole. 
                I look forward to hearing more of the 
                work of Campo, a professor at California 
                State University. He has produced music 
                that includes pieces for brass and guitar, 
                solo and in various combinations, 
              
 
              
Kovach’s Trio is a 
                kind of ‘easy listening’ Bartók 
                whose harmonic language is used on folksy 
                tunes to agreeable effect, reminiscent 
                of the wind-based neo-classicism of 
                Stravinsky. The delightful translation 
                of ‘ostinato’ as ‘obstinate’ in the 
                liner notes is spot-on for the first 
                movement, while some poised, elegiac 
                playing by flute and clarinet in the 
                Largo reinforces the ‘Autumn’ subtitle 
                of the work. The dance-based finale 
                winds up another charming work, again 
                very well-played. Kovach’s music, which 
                includes five operas, deserves to be 
                better known. 
              
 
              
The Trio’s guitarist 
                Antonino Maddonni contributes his own 
                Introduction and Variations on "La 
                Folia", a worthwhile and entertaining 
                addition to the 250 or so examples composed 
                since the tune first became popular 
                in the sixteenth century (see a comprehensive 
                list at www.folias.nl). 
                Ravel, Milhaud and Claude Bolling turn 
                up at a Rio beach café in this 
                delightful mélange of jazzy counterpoint, 
                baroque dance (a stately sarabande) 
                and Latin rhythms. In the final variation, 
                the guitar comes out in its full Latin 
                colours as the ancient tune emerges 
                as a Brazilian rumba through the texture 
                of wind flutter-tonguing and percussion 
                effects. Great fun. 
              
 
              
The CD is completed 
                by a rollicking version of Rossini’s 
                Italian Girl Overture, reminding one 
                that the flute was a favourite ‘arrangements’ 
                instrument in Rossini’s day. Small forces 
                versions of orchestral works often work 
                extremely well and this is no exception. 
                Having played Sousa marches in a recorder 
                quartet, this trio seems like a mighty 
                combination in comparison. Even the 
                ‘Rossini steamroller’ effect works, 
                suggesting that crescendo is more a 
                matter of generating tension rather 
                than volume. It is often the little 
                throwaway phrases – the turns, twiddles 
                and swooping scales - that define the 
                character of Rossini’s music best. 
              
 
              
I was surprised and 
                captivated by this CD which provided 
                a wide variety of styles and depths 
                with equal proficiency. The recording 
                is excellent and the disc strongly recommended. 
              
Roger Blackburn