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Richard FRANCK (1858-1938)
Piano Quartet in A Op.33 (1901) [33.02]
Piano Quartet in E (in one movement) Op.41 (1905) [8.48]
Three Fantasies for piano Op.28 (1896) [23.36]
Christoph
Schickedanz (violin); Marius Nichiteanu (viola); Mathias
Beyer-Karlshoj (cello); Bernhard Fograscher (piano)
rec. SWR Studios, Karlsruhe, Germany, 12-14 December 2005 AUDITE
92.522 [65.29]
In November 2003 Musicweb posted reviews of four CDs
of music Eduard Franck (see
below). Since then the total recorded by Audite has increased
to nine (including
two violin concertos, two symphonies and a fair amount of
chamber music) including this one of music by his son Richard
for piano quartet and solo piano. The driving force behind this
both worthy and worthwhile project has been another father
and son pairing, Paul and Andreas Feuchte, who are respectively
grandson and great-grandson of Richard through his daughter
Toni Feuchte to whom the family’s musical legacy was left.
The musical language of Franck Vater and Sohn,
despite the change of generation and all that usually implies,
remains unashamedly that of Mendelssohn and Schumann; for
proof listen no further than the piano quartet in one movement
with its virtually note-for-note quotation from the finale
of Mendelssohn’s violin concerto in the opening and closing Allegri.
Franck’s musical language consists of engagingly pleasant
melodies in the context of the traditionally diatonic harmonic
vocabulary he inherited via his father from those
two mid-19th century composers. They are cast
in the mould of Max Bruch, who also continued to write in
1920 as he had in 1865. Time stood still, the New German
School headed by Liszt and Wagner was not for them, and one
has to listen to and accept the works of such composers on
that basis. Nonetheless Richard Franck writes well for the
piano quartet combination. There is lucid clarity in the
lines given to the three stringed instruments as well as
powerful sonorities and rich textures in the piano writing.
It is curious that, given the apparent skill and confidence
he displays and which comes across when listening to his
music, he did not write for string quartet (a Spanish Serenade
is his only foray into that area), but on the other hand
his masterly piano writing in the Three Fantasies (he was
an outstanding pianist) confirms the territory occupied by
that instrument as his natural habitat. Both quartets are
certainly worthy of a place in the piano quartet repertory.
Performances here are excellent, with muscular virtuosity
from the pianist and richly vibrant tone from all three string
players, the recording ambience first class. They clearly
enjoyed discovering and passing on to us these highly enjoyable
works. It’s a must for those who want to explore the musical
byways of the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Christopher Fifield
Reviews of Audite releases of Eduard Franck 20.025 Violin
concerto, Symphony 20.032 String
quartets 20.033 String
quatet, piano quintet 20.034 Violin
concerto, Symphony
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