Tags
Language
Tags
May 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
28 29 30 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31 1

Kocian Quartet, Jaroslav Tůma, Michal Kaňka, Petr Hejný - Antonín Reicha: Piano Quintet, Trio for Three Cellos (2023)

Posted By: ArlegZ
Kocian Quartet, Jaroslav Tůma, Michal Kaňka, Petr Hejný - Antonín Reicha: Piano Quintet, Trio for Three Cellos (2023)

Kocian Quartet, Jaroslav Tůma, Michal Kaňka, Petr Hejný - Antonín Reicha: Piano Quintet, Trio for Three Cellos (2023)
WEB FLAC | Tracks ~ 331 Mb | Total time: 70:42 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Praga Digitals | # PRD 250 179 | Recorded: 2002

Antonín Reicha’s music continues to inhabit the fringes of the active repertoire of everyone except perhaps wind quintets, which is a pity. Certainly Reicha was one of the most interesting and inventive composers of his era, and one of the few lesser-known personalities of the Classical Period aside from Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and Rossini whose music deserves to be revived and enjoyed. In 1826 he composed this enormous Piano Quintet, and there’s not a second of ‘dead’ music in any of its nearly 43 minutes. The sheer forward energy of the opening movement is truly extraordinary, with countless surprising turns of phrase, while the succeeding Lento poco andante offers some gorgeous experiments in texture (for starters, check out the central cello solo backed by pizzicato strings and graceful piano figurations). A scherzo that never goes quite where you think it’s going to (particularly in the central trio) yields at last to a finale that is the most formally regular of the four movements, but no less tuneful and expertly laid out for the ensemble.
The Trio in E-flat for three cellos is one of those tours de force of tone and texture that Reicha seemed able to toss off with astonishing ease. This also is a big work - 27 minutes - in four movements and delightfully euphonious while at the same time far more colourful than we have any right to expect from this particular combination. An earlier work dating from 1807, there’s more of Mozart and Haydn here than in the Piano Quintet, but certainly that’s no penance. The performances of both works leave little to be desired. In particular pianist Jaroslav Tůma plays a delightfully crisp-sounding fortepiano that offers a perfect foil to the more fulsome textures of the Kocian Quartet, and the three cellists match their tones extremely well. Best of all, the players have the energy and sheer stamina required to keep the music moving with the liveliness that characterizes all of this composer’s best work. Fine sound rounds off an excellent release that can only do Reicha’s reputation good.
–David Hurwitz

Performer:
Kocian Quartet
Jaroslav Tůma, fortepiano
Michal Kaňka, cello
Petr Hejný, cello

Tracklist:
Antonín Reicha (1770–1836)
Piano Quintet in C Minor
01. I. Adagio - Allegro
02. II. Lento poco andante
03. III. Allegro vivo - Menuetto
04. IV. Finale. Allegro
Trio for 3 Cellos in E-Flat Major
05. I. Allegro
06. II. Andante
07. III. Menuetto. Allegro
08. IV. Finale. Lento poco andante

Kocian Quartet, Jaroslav Tůma, Michal Kaňka, Petr Hejný - Antonín Reicha: Piano Quintet, Trio for Three Cellos (2023)

Thanks to the original releaser