This is a sensible coupling. The Dvořák is the more recorded 
                and here receives a persuasive performance. It’s somewhat slower 
                than the classic Suk Trio traversal though not in the finale where 
                the momentum is exciting. One of my few complaints relates to 
                the recording not the performance. It’s rather up-front and quite 
                dry and so there’s not much bloom to the strings, which on occasion 
                - the violin of Streten Krstic especially - sound a touch wiry. 
                It’s true that the Gelius trio is not quite so adept at floating 
                some of the more lyrical paragraphs and that by comparison with 
                some other recordings they can, from time, seem a bit straight 
                backed – but compensation comes in the shape of the athletic and 
                committed playing.
                  
The slow movement 
                    isn’t as sharply etched or as rhythmically urgent as the Suk 
                    Trio but in the context of the Gelius’s playing it’s entirely 
                    consistent, with a second subject that is broad and singing. 
                    Possibly the dynamics could be more acutely judged but that 
                    might be a question of the recording balance. And the withdrawn 
                    quality that many of the finest native trios find in this 
                    movement is not so evident, though the zest the Gelius brings 
                    will have to do in place of wistful freshness. These things 
                    are in any case a question of degree. The finale is certainly 
                    fast, not quite furious, but exciting and energetic. It’s 
                    a more than competent reading all in all – not a front-runner 
                    but a well-considered and vital performance.
                  
The companion 
                    work is an older established cornerstone of the Czech chamber 
                    repertoire, Smetana’s Op.15. Things open very expressively, 
                    heavily vibrated and bordering on the overwrought – but things 
                    soon settle down into the Gelius modus operandi, which is 
                    one of generous intensity. The sense of ensemble is fine in 
                    this work, as fine indeed as in the companion. The rhythm 
                    is crisp, tight, Micaela Gelius proving an impressive guide, 
                    perhaps at her very – and considerable – best in the driving 
                    finale. Her partners match tonal and vibrato matters well. 
                    One criticism here; I wish they’d slightly relax more within 
                    a phrase - in the second movement in particular. Some of the 
                    playing is just a little too quick to allow them to phrase 
                    more broadly with the result that the performance is rather 
                    unsmiling. It could do with a bit of yielding to be even more 
                    effective.
                  
Not a first choice 
                    then – but this is a trio to watch.
                  
Jonathan 
                    Woolf