When combined with appropriately set up stringed instruments, the piano, with its articulate, leather-covered hammers capable of drawing a wide variety of colors, lends Schuman n’ s writing, so frequently criticized as turgid or muddy, a clarity and luminosity which entirely vindicates his scoring. It thus resembles closely the 1839 piano presented to Clara Schumann by Graf, on which both the piano quintet and quartet were written. The Regier, combining features of pianos of the 1830s from the shops of Ignaz Bösendorfer and Conrad Graf, two of Vienna’s finest builders, is, like its models, constructed almost entirely of wood, lacking completely the composite wood/iron frames of some contemporary non-Viennese instruments. Regier played by Lambert Orkis on this disk. Though Clara Schumann, at the end of her life, might have encountered such instruments, those she played at the height of her virtuosity were substantially different, as is the 80-note fortepiano by R. Its full cast-iron plate carries a combined string tension approaching thirty tons. The “concert grand,” as its name might imply, was developed for the large concert hall. The Quintet constituted the beginning and was exceptionally well liked: I would have liked to play it at my last concert, but the hall is too big for chamber music.” In a typically apposite remark, Susan Youens has written of the Quintet: “‘In this work,’ Schumann seems to say, ‘you can have an orchestra in your parlor. Clara Schumann’s diary entry from Moscow, 1844, is revelatory in this regard: “On Thursday the 2nd of May (April 20 according to the Russian calendar) at 1 o’clock we gave a matinee at our place. Beautiful as such renditions may be, they fundamentally distort the delicate balance of public and private which chamber music of Schumann’s time epitomized. The Piano Quintet and Quartet are frequently performed in large concert halls with a nine-foot-long concert grand piano. He entered, to all appearances, full-fledged and confident upon the difficult and problematic art of chamber music. There is little that seems tentative, experimental, or uncertain in touch. Schumann’s chamber music of 1842 is in many ways among the most perfect of all the products of his genius the purest and most powerful in its beauty, the strongest in its form, best balanced in its substance, and best adapted in its technical means and processes to the expression of the composer’s thought. ![]() Writing in the still-useful Cobbett’s Cyclopedic Survey of Chamber Music (1929), Richard Aldrich observed: The accomplishment as a whole is nothing short of breathtaking. 47) recorded here, and the first of his piano trios, published later as Op. 41 string quartets (“dedicated to his friend Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy”), the piano quintet (Op. Location: C3B 6,56,7 Extent: 7.5 linear feet Provenance This collection was the gift of Robert Schwartz and was received by Sibley Music Library in 1983. When, in 1842, Schumann turned to chamber music, taking a self-guided tour (with Clara as a constant companion) through the great Classical-era masterpieces for inspiration, he produced, in barely more than nine months, his three Op.
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