The independent designer record label Onyx was launched 
                  this autumn with recordings from renowned performers: soprano 
                  Barbara Bonney, the Borodin String Quartet, pianist Pascal Rogé 
                  and violinist Viktoria Mullova. The notion of starting 
                  a privately funded record label in today’s intensely competitive 
                  and contracting classical music industry would seem at first 
                  sight to have the potential for success of arranging package 
                  tours to post-Sadaam Baghdad. That said, the first Onyx release 
                  that I reviewed was Mullova’s set of five Vivaldi violin concertos 
                  which became one of my ‘Records of the Year’.
                The 
                  present recording is the second release in the ‘Rogé Edition’ 
                  following swiftly on the heels his highly acclaimed Debussy 
                  Préludes, (Onyx 4004). This recording marks the tenth 
                  anniversary of Rogé’s chamber music partnership with Kobayashi 
                  and Hasegawa, both renowned in Japan and having toured widely 
                  with Rogé. The timing of this release just about ties in with 
                  the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of Ernest Chausson’s 
                  birth, a pure coincidence I’m sure. It’s an event that seems 
                  to have been virtually ignored in 2005.
                Ravel’s 
                  highly acclaimed Trio was written in the summer of 1914 
                  at his Basque retreat of Saint Jean de Luz, whist the composer 
                  was on holiday with friends. It has been said that it betrays 
                  the looming Great War, but Ravel could not have known the extent 
                  of the horrors that were in store. Musicologist David Ewen described 
                  the score as, “a work reduced to essentials ... a masterpiece 
                  of form and technique in its avoidance of all superfluous details.” 
                  A highly impressed biographer Alexis Roland-Manuel wrote that 
                  it is “at once serious and impassioned, in which each instalment 
                  is clearly outlined in the enhancement of melody.” 
                Rogé, 
                  Kobayashi and Hasegawa expertly and lovingly lay bare its suggestion 
                  of Spanish themes that hauntingly explore the contrasts of sonorities 
                  between piano and strings. The impressive lengthy opening movement 
                  with its ingenuity of structure and originality of metrical 
                  design is given an interpretation that is dreamy and feminine, 
                  redolent of the tentative beginnings of a heady romance. The 
                  second movement is a scherzo called a pantoum, 
                  after a Malayan poem that calls for two independent thoughts 
                  moving in parallel lines. The three players cultivate a mood 
                  of high excitement that is both energetic and nervy. In the 
                  passacaille the opposing sonorities of the piano and 
                  strings are expertly drawn by Rogé and friends with a consummate 
                  lightness that reminds one of the carefree air of a daydream. 
                  In the impressive final movement, brilliant and quasi-orchestral 
                  in conception, Rogé’s trio bring out the dazzling textures with 
                  precision and splendid understanding. 
                Unlike 
                  the Piano Trio of the mature Ravel, that of his predecessor 
                  Chausson is the work of a relative beginner. Chausson composed 
                  his underrated trio, which was his first chamber work, in 1881 
                  after a period of study with Massenet and Franck. 
                The 
                  thickly scored and extended opening movement with its abrupt 
                  dynamic changes and increasing intensity is confidently interpreted 
                  with relentless momentum and deep affection. Performed with 
                  vivaciousness and considerable wit the second movement is a 
                  short and delightful, if rather four-square, scherzo. 
                  The third movement marked assez lent rather to the characteristic 
                  elegiac style of the opening movement and is given a sure and 
                  characterful performance. The closing movement opens with deceptive 
                  simplicity and but quickly darkens becoming more complex. Rogé 
                  and friends perform this fascinating movement with a robust 
                  splendour that is ardent and authoritative.
                This 
                  Onyx release proves to be one of the finest available interpretations 
                  of both scores. In the Ravel I would not wish to be without 
                  the 2001 Swiss recording from Renaud and Gautier Capuçon and 
                  Frank Braley on Virgin Classics 545492 2 9, c/w the sonatas 
                  for violin and piano, for violin and cello and for violin and 
                  piano ‘Sonate posthume’. I also admire the Beaux Arts interpretations 
                  on Philips 454 1342-2, c/w String Quartet and Sonata for violin 
                  and piano and also the Florestan Trio on Hyperion CDA 67114, 
                  c/w Fauré Piano Trio, Op. 120 and Debussy Piano Trio. In the 
                  far less recorded Chausson Trio a favourite account from my 
                  collection is from Pascal Devoyon, Philippe Graffin and Gary 
                  Hoffman on Hyperion CDA 67028, c/w Poème, Op 25, Andante 
                  et Allegro for clarinet and piano and Pièce for cello 
                  and piano, Op. 39.
                Onyx 
                  are to be congratulated for this well presented release. The 
                  engineers provide an impressive sound quality and the booklet 
                  notes from the uncredited writer are interesting and informative. 
                  At just over an hour in duration this is not over-generous by 
                  today’s standards and by my estimation could easily have accommodated 
                  another work, for example the Fauré Piano Trio, Op. 120.
                Rogé, 
                  Kobayashi and Hasegawa are outstanding advocates for these wonderful 
                  French scores. I offer an enthusiastic recommendation for this 
                  superb Onyx release. 
                Michael 
                  Cookson
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