The
                    piano trio in E flat major occupies a special place in Schubert’s
                    oeuvre. Not only was it part of the programme of the only
                    public concert featuring Schubert’s music during his lifetime;
                    it was also the first of his compositions to be published
                    by a foreign publisher, Probst in Leipzig. Publication was
                    delayed and when the copies Schubert had requested finally
                    arrived the composer was already dead. 
                
                 
                
                
                Of
                    the two full-length piano trios Schubert wrote No. 1 in B
                    flat major has always been the most frequently performed.
                    This is due perhaps to a more direct melodic appeal and that
                    it is a lighter work than the E flat major. No. 2 is also
                    the longer work and performed here in the original version,
                    which means that the cuts Schubert made in the last movement
                    before publication have not been observed; it becomes even
                    longer. 
                
                 
                
                Recordings
                    exist of both works and the Kungsbacka Piano Trio face keen
                    competition from both long established versions and, especially,
                    the Florestan Trio (Hyperion CDA67347), recorded in December
                    2001, which has been my comparison.
                
                 
                
                Kungsbacka
                    is a small town on the West Coast of Sweden, just south of
                    Gothenburg. That’s where this group gave their first performance
                    in 1997. Since then they have established an annual festival
                    there. Although 2/3 of the trio are Swedish they are firmly
                    established in England and appear regularly all over the
                    world. This is not their first commercial disc – for BIS
                    they have recorded music by Swedish composer Karin Rehnqvist – but
                    it is their recording debut in standard repertoire.
                
                 
                
                The
                    recording is lively and immediate with quite a wide stereo
                    image and the balance is on my equipment impeccable. I listened
                    both through my ordinary speakers and through headphones,
                    which I often do, especially with chamber music, and the
                    effect was that of sitting in one of the front seats in a
                    medium sized venue. Every detail was clearly audible but
                    without the distracting sounds of extraneous noises from
                    the instruments and heavy breathing that too close miking
                    can result in. By comparison The Florestan felt a little
                    less immediate, and a little “cleaner”, like being transported
                    a few seats further back in the hall, but the difference
                    is negligible. The difference in sound can also be described
                    as Kungsbacka having a meatier sound while Florestan are
                    marginally more refined. There is no difference in quality
                    in this remark, I hasten to add, only a slightly difference
                    in approach. There is also a feeling that Susan Tomes (Florestan)
                    piano is a little more glittering than Simon Crawford-Phillips
                    (Kungsbacka). Try the second movement and, especially, the
                    third movement to see what I mean. Overall Florestan have
                    a lighter touch and are also fractionally faster in all four
                    movements. This is most notable in the last movement which
                    in the Florestan version plays for 14:36 while Kungsbacka
                    take 19:08. Listened to in isolation one never has a feeling
                    that they actually are slow, but played one after the other
                    the difference is noticeable. 
                
                 
                
                Having
                    heard Kungsbacka live in similar repertoire is was familiar
                    with their wholehearted music making and their intensity,
                    and this pays dividends also in this recording, even if the
                    visual element is missing. The dancing third movement, with
                    its canon writing, is bouncy and there is real surge in the
                    contrasting trio, and in the finale they let loose the energy,
                    making the whole movement a tour de force, especially on
                    the part of the pianist. The beautiful melody of the second
                    movement, which also appears again in the finale, has long
                    been thought to be a Swedish folksong, and recent research
                    has confirmed that it is based on Se solen sjunker (Lo,
                    the sun is setting). It is memorably performed here with
                    mellifluous cello tone from Jesper Svedberg. 
                
                 
                
                Considering
                    what Schubert wrote to his publisher: “the cuts in the last
                    movement must be scrupulously observed” one can question
                    the decision to play the original with another 98 bars, much
                    of it repetition. True, there are some inventive ideas there
                    and they are well worth hearing from time to time, but this
                    also means that an already long work becomes even longer.
                    Florestan offer both versions of the last movement, the printed
                    one within the trio proper and the original as an extra.
                    This leaves it to the listener to make his/her own choice.
                    Even though Kungsbacka have a filler, there would still have
                    been room for the cut finale. 
                
                 
                
                The
                    filler is the Sonatensatz written in 1812 when Schubert
                    was 15 and it is a surprisingly assured composition. Here
                    the piano dominates, as was the norm in earlier days of trio
                    writing, but there is also some independent writing for the
                    strings, at least the violin. 
                
                 
                
                Even
                    if in the last resort I have a slight preference for the
                    Florestan’s leaner and fractionally quicker reading, the
                    Kungsbacka’s version is a worthy addition to the catalogue
                    and I hope they will get an opportunity to record the B flat
                    major as well. Considering the price difference – Kungsbacka
                    retails at around a third of the Florestan – no one need
                    hesitate to acquire this disc which has an intensity and
                    a freshness all of its own.
                
                 
                
                    Göran Forsling
                
                     
                
                
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