The Oistrakh Trio’s 
                  recordings are an important part of 
                  the violinist’s discographic legacy 
                  and it’s good to see Doremi picking 
                  up on the Tchaikovsky, a work I don’t 
                  believe Preiser has (yet) included 
                  in their first-class trawl through 
                  the Melodiya back catalogue of this 
                  august ensemble. Otherwise the trio 
                  and quartet recordings of the late 
                  1940s and early 1950s remain under-appreciated 
                  even by admirers of the violinist, 
                  an impression only increased by the 
                  greater celebrity and relative ubiquity 
                  of the recordings of that other stellar 
                  post-War Soviet ensemble, the Gilels-Kogan-Rostropovich 
                  trio. Indeed this 1948 Oistrakh traversal 
                  of the Tchaikovsky trio was pretty 
                  comprehensively eclipsed by the later 
                  recording by their friendly rivals 
                  – a performance, it has to be said, 
                  of astonishing power and conviction. 
                
 
                
Still, this earlier 
                  reading has more than its share of 
                  moments. Tempi are fluid and forward 
                  moving and tempo relationships, not 
                  least in the variations of the second 
                  movement, are splendidly controlled. 
                  Timbral matters are assured, the two 
                  string players blending and shading 
                  their tones and there’s plenty of 
                  warmth, both in ensemble and individually. 
                  Oistrakh frequently floats his tone 
                  with marvellous affection, the less 
                  effusive Knushevitzky shadowing and 
                  answering with great sensitively. 
                  Oborin plays with accustomed assurance 
                  - and the most judicious balancing 
                  of chords into the bargain. The climax 
                  of the first movement is graded with 
                  great perception and the variations 
                  of the second are characterised with 
                  colour and feeling – note the drone 
                  passages, the sturdy fugato and the 
                  passionate approach to the funeral 
                  march. 
                
 
                
All this is worthy 
                  of the highest commendation. The recorded 
                  quality however is rather dampened 
                  down and airless. Certainly these 
                  are rather difficult 78s from which 
                  to work but it seems to me that the 
                  battle between conservation of treble 
                  airiness and reduced surface noise 
                  has been tilted rather decisively 
                  toward the latter. As such there are 
                  moments when you will wonder how much 
                  you’re missing from the originals; 
                  I think rather too much. 
                
 
                
There are some weighty 
                  bonuses from around the same time. 
                  The Méditation is charismatic 
                  and superbly done; bewitching slides, 
                  some in daringly rapid succession, 
                  and very evocative - in slightly more 
                  open sound as well. We also have the 
                  Waltz –Scherzo which features 
                  brilliantly light bowing and electric 
                  trills as well as much obvious warmth, 
                  and to finish, with Kondrashin, the 
                  Sérénade Mélancolique. 
                  This is the earliest of the recordings, 
                  from 1945, and rather dim sounding 
                  though as was almost invariable with 
                  Russian discs of the time the violin 
                  is boldly spotlit at the expense of 
                  some orchestral detail. Despite that 
                  it’s again rather over-filtered for 
                  my taste. 
                
 
                
This is the sixth 
                  in Doremi’s continuing Oistrakh edition. 
                  I can certainly recommend that interested 
                  readers acquaint themselves with the 
                  Trio performance and enjoy, if they 
                  can and budgets stretch that far, 
                  systematic comparison with the Kogan-led 
                  performance. Some worries about the 
                  filtering, few about the performances. 
                
 
                
Jonathan Woolf