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CDA67464

Buy? £13.99

Recording details: February 2004
Potton Hall, Dunwich, Suffolk, United Kingdom
Produced by Andrew Keener
Engineered by Simon Eadon
Release date: June 2005
Total duration: 73 minutes 2 seconds

'The talented members of the pan-European Gaudier Ensemble are perfectly equipped to convey these different aspects of Weber's musical personality … With a top-quality recording, this is a disc which does full and thoroughly entertaining justice to a still underrated master' (BBC Music Magazine)

'The Gaudier's performances are thoroughly enjoyable: gracefully shaped, rhythmically exuberant and relishing the music's sense of fun. In the Clarinet Quintet, Richard Hosford negotiates his pirouettes and vertiginous leaps with aplomb. The tricky instrumental balances in the trio and quartet are expertly managed, while pianist Susan Tomes's scintillating fingerwork is a delight throughout' (The Daily Telegraph)

'Richard Hosford is the ideal soloist here, supple and silky, with beautiful tone: and his intensely delicate, only-just-audible pianissimi in the slow movement are a joy to hear … the work altogether is a little masterpiece which deserves to be much better known. Hopefully this excellent disc, so beautifully played and recorded, will do much to disseminate it' (International Record Review)

Complete Chamber Music
This new recital brings together all of Weber’s chamber works to employ more than two musicians. Opening the disc is the famous Clarinet Quintet, presented in a performance which sparkles with joie de vivre from the off. Written for the clarinet virtuoso Heinrich Baermann (whose recent acquisition of a new-fangled ten-keyed instrument opened up exciting new technical possibilities for the composer), the work quickly established itself in the public arena, its lyrical poise encompassing more than enough pyrotechnical showmanship to guarantee rapturous applause. The Piano Quartet, written when the composer was barely out of his teens, sets a similarly ambitious challenge – this is composition at the cutting edge of the Romantic tradition where all four instruments are given scope to shine within a comprehensively convention-breaking structure. The Trio for flute, cello and piano was completed in 1819, during the composition of Weber’s operatic masterpiece Der Freischütz. Graceful lyricism sits happily alongside impassioned intensity as the composer unites the three instruments – perhaps unlikely bedfellows – in a whole of pleasing integrity. The Gaudier Ensemble is among the foremost of chamber ensembles, and these latest performances are every bit as thrilling as their enviable reputation would lead one to expect.