Well drilled, attractive and thoughtful 
                  though these performances are, they 
                  don’t offer much challenge to the 
                  established recordings. And in this 
                  repertoire, whether you incline to 
                  the integral set of the Beaux Arts 
                  – rather suave – or the rhythmic intensity 
                  of the complete Suk Trio, or points 
                  in between such as the Borodin, the 
                  Prague Trio or the good Golub-Kaplan-Carr 
                  set, you really need a fusion of tonal 
                  excellence and native rhythmic drama. 
                  By native this doesn’t necessarily 
                  mean a Czech ensemble, though when 
                  you hear Josef Chuchro’s eloquent 
                  cello you’d think so, so wonderfully 
                  does he play in the Suk Trio recordings. 
                
                 
                
The Macquarie Trio 
                  Australia is chamber ensemble-in-residence 
                  at Macquarie University and their 
                  ensemble is practised and excellent, 
                  fine tuned after years of music-making. 
                  The drawback here is a lack of phrasal 
                  elasticity, a compound of straight 
                  rather Germanic rhythm and restrained 
                  lyric impress. They could be far more 
                  rustic and unrestrained in the opening 
                  movement of the B flat major. Piano 
                  rhythms are not as sharply drawn as 
                  they might be and the corporate sonority 
                  they cultivate tends to the restrained. 
                  The piano rhythms pale beside Jan 
                  Panenka’s just-so playing for the 
                  Suk Trio. The problems are acute in 
                  Scherzos where rhythms never sound 
                  completely natural or unforced – the 
                  rallentando in this trio’s Allegretto 
                  sounds overdone. 
                
 
                
They’re not a trio 
                  naturally inclined to indulge tempo 
                  – good, fast tempo for the G minor 
                  Trio’s opening for example – but its 
                  Largo sounds emotionally inert, lacking 
                  colour and not building to climaxes 
                  through use of dynamic variance. Compare 
                  this to Josef Suk’s leadership of 
                  his trio and hear him really sculpt 
                  the apex of the movement with inexorable 
                  logic and tensile drama. They take 
                  a good clip in the Scherzo but it 
                  sounds breathless – which it shouldn’t. 
                
 
                
The F minor receives 
                  rather a reserved performance – straight, 
                  attractive enough on its own terms 
                  but rather missing the Bohemian vivacity 
                  of the Allegretto grazioso and its 
                  corollary, warm wit. And the Dumky 
                  lacks timbral intensity and animated 
                  weight, that sense of cumulative tension 
                  that gives such life to the best readings. 
                
 
                
This all sounds like 
                  a litany of complaint. In many ways 
                  the Macquarie’s readings are admirably 
                  straight and unswayed by distractive 
                  gesture. Technically they’re inevitably 
                  on top of the notes and as I suggested 
                  it’s real trio playing, not a collection 
                  of outsize individualists failing 
                  to conform tonally. The reticence 
                  and rhythmic smoothness may well appeal 
                  to some listeners bashed too many 
                  times by trios out to make points. 
                  But in the end I’m afraid you will 
                  need other performances. The recording 
                  isn’t always of the finest but the 
                  Suk Trio offers nourishment of an 
                  altogether more exalted level, performances 
                  of a special authority and truthfulness. 
                  For the set of all four you can’t 
                  beat them. 
                
 
                
Jonathan Woolf