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American Record Guide
May/June 2006
by Steve Ritter
Brahms: Clarinet Quintet Op. 115 (for
clarinet & string quartet)
Dohnanyi: Sextet for clarinet/piano/french horn & string trio
CENTAUR Records #2745 67 minutes
With the surfeit of Brahms recordings
the last two years---just check some of the back issues---I can hardly
believe that Centaur has come up with such an incredible reading from
an unknown source.
The Hollywood Quartet was one of America's
best ensembles, widely recorded and with a broad repertory that put other
groups to shame. They were of that "no
nonsense" generation where the excesses of romanticism were shorn for a
much more direct, "composer first" attitude; yet, like most American
quartets, they played with a fervent spirit and collegial, highly emotional tenor
that as often as not breathed new life into a stale and staid European performance
tradition.
The New Hollywood Quartet, formed with
studio and other musicians in the Hollywood area, play a lot like their
namesake. I was quite startled to hear their unanimity of ensemble and
supercharged, amazingly coherent viewpoint. Gary Gray, Professor at UCLA
and widely heard west coast performer, sounds to me about as close to
Reginald Kell (another iconoclast) as I have ever heard. Tempos are upbeat...no
lingering, autumnal "Brahmsitis" here...and it all works. Something
this bunch is doing....and I am almost at a loss to tell you exactly what it
is....gets right to the heart of this music.
I can't tell say that this will outrank
the favorites, for there are too many, Kell included. But it goes right
to the top of the list with all the others, and even if this is your
only recording, you do well.
The Dohnanyi is a Brahmsian, yet not
Brahmsian piece that inspires raves every time people hear it.
It is a wonder that it is not programmed
more often. Maybe it's the odd scoring for piano, string trio, clarinet
and horn. At over 30 minutes, it is a
substantial, very effective piece of chamber music.
The clarity of the writing is remarkable
and the the addition of the piano to this mixed instrumentation gives
the form an almost quasi-symphonic weight. Any recording of it is welcome
and we are fortunate to have had some very good ones. David Mulbury liked
a Bridge release with players from the American Symphony (May/June 2005
issue), while Elaine Fine could hardly contain herself when speaking
of the Spectrum Concerts release, on Naxos, coupled with the same composer's "Serenade" (Sept./Oct
2003 issue). I think I can confidently add this present issue, full and
sensous, with more superb playing.
The sound here is a bit of a puzzler.
It has smaller scope than I'm used to, with the instruments more concentrated
into one physical sound space, and it was recorded at a fairly low sound
level. But despite the constrictions, it is rich and warm, with a dark
color that I find most attractive.
Centaur has certainly suprised me with
this one, and I hope these forces will continue their fine work in future
releases.

Here is a link to the American
Record Guide site.

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