[ Alpha / 3 CD ]
Release Date: Friday 22 September 2017
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The fruitful partnership between the Alpha label, the Queen Elisabeth Music Chapel and the Palazzetto Bru Zane continues with this set of chamber music by Anton Reicha, performed by the musicians of the Chapel, young talents of an exceptionally high standard, ready and willing to take up the challenge of this music. A key figure of the early nineteenth century, this Czech composer who became a naturalised French citizen did not leave his contemporaries indifferent. Both his music and his theoretical writings set zealous partisans against fierce detractors. This three disc set, assembling pieces from different genres and periods, gives an insight into the richness of the composer's extremely prolific output of chamber music, whose originality can still fascinate us nearly two centuries after his death: it illustrates the diversity of the instrumental genres he tackled (sonatas, fugues, études and variations for piano; piano trio, string quartet, string quintet) and a compositional art characterised at once by perfect mastery - as one would expect from someone trained by Haydn in Vienna between 1802 and 1808 - and by the greatest originality.
"The performances, given by graduates and ensembles from the Chapelle Musicale Reine Elisabeth in Belgium, are uniformly excellent. Three players divide the piano works between them, and Josquin Otals's assertive, bravura manner contrasts both with Victoria Vassilenko's more reflective approach and ore Radevski's lyrical refinement. The Quatuor Girard do fine things with the E major Quartet: leader Hugues Girard brings elegant dexterity to his solos, and there's real drama when they are joined by viola player Tanguy Parisot for the String Quintet in F minor, a dark work that generates considerable intensity. This is very much an ensemble to watch out for, as is the Trio Medici, who tackle the almost symphonic D minor Piano Trio with great panache...it all leaves you wanting to hear more, both of Reicha and of his performers." Gramophone