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Chopin: Cello Sonata; Piano Trio; Grand Duo, Review

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  • Chopin: Cello Sonata; Piano Trio; Grand Duo, Review

    CHOPIN: CELLO SONATA; PIANO TRIO; GRAND DUO, REVIEW
    By Geoffrey Norris

    Daily Telegraph
    6:10PM GMT 26 Jan 2010
    UK

    Young talent: violinist Vilde Frang EMI 6 87742 2, £13.99

    The CDs likely to be released in this, Chopin's bicentenary year
    can hardly fail to be weighted in favour of his solo piano music,
    since that is the area to which he devoted the bulk of his creative
    attention. That fact alone makes this programme of three ensemble
    pieces all the more welcome, but, even if there were suddenly to be an
    avalanche of discs of the Cello Sonata, the Piano Trio and the Grand
    Duo on themes from Meyerbeer's opera Robert le diable, it would not
    diminish the dynamic impact of this one. The young Danish cellist
    Andreas Brantelid, currently a member of the BBC's New Generation
    Artists scheme, is joined by the ideally matched Armenian-born pianist
    Marianna Shirinyan and, in the Trio, by the Norwegian violinist Vilde
    Frang for performances of remarkable flair and exceptional poise.

    Why do people find Faure difficult?The Trio, albeit that Chopin
    scarcely holds back with the demands of his piano writing, comes
    across with discerningly imagined proportion and balance, its melodies
    beautifully floated, its instrumental colours subtly blended. The
    dance rhythms of the finale leap from the page in playing that has
    sinew and delicacy.

    Brantelid comes more to the fore in the Sonata and in the Grand
    Duo, and, in harmony with Shirinyan, does so with terrific panache
    and innate sensibility and with a tone that is both burnished and
    malleable. The fact that you can also sometimes hear Brantelid's
    deep intakes of breath somehow strengthens the passion of his
    interpretations, which reveal a stylistic insight, elegance and
    emotional power to match his striking technical aplomb. This is an
    imaginative and fruitful combination of young talents on a disc that
    will be relished long after the bicentenary year is over.
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