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CDA67373


Recording details: December 2002
Potton Hall, Dunwich, Suffolk, United Kingdom
Produced by Andrew Keener
Engineered by Simon Eadon
Release date: May 2003
Total duration: 62 minutes 44 seconds

CLASSICAL CD OF THE WEEK (THE SUNDAY TIMES)
EDITOR'S CHOICE (BBC MUSIC MAGAZINE)
EDITOR'S CHOICE (GRAMOPHONE MAGAZINE)

'For freshness, insight and sheer beauty of tone and phrase, this new disc takes the palm ... it's pure joy from first to last and I urge you to add it to your shelves' (BBC Music Magazine)

'These are deeply musical performances, perceptive and satisfying, of two masterpieces' (International Record Review)

'It is in fact clear from the opening that this is a performance to reckon with, exemplified by its careful measured tempo, its poise and its subtle handling of the balance between strings and piano. A real winner, this disc; warmly recommended' (Gramophone)

'The Leopold Trio gives a crisp, clear and engaging performance' (The Strad)

'Listening to these brand new Hyperion performances by The Leopold String Trio and pianist Paul Lewis got me thinking about elegance in a new way ... There isn't a harsh note in the entire recording ... These performances have flair and panache. I can remember no recording that presents these two masterful quartets so gracefully rendered as this one by The Leoplod String Trio and Lewis.' (Fanfare, USA)

'Truly excellent' (Classic FM Magazine)

'...one of the happiest musical unions of recent times - stylish, spirited and spontaneous' (Daily Telegraph)

Piano Quartets
LISTEN TO ALL EXTRACTS
Mozart at his most fetching! Neither Beethoven in his maturity nor Haydn wrote for the piano quartet - piano with string trio - yet this oddly neglected instrumental combination inspired Mozart to pen these mature works that were to be the first masterpieces of the genre. Mozart delights in having richer textures than in the more common piano trio and the wider variety of sonorities than in the string quartet. Indeed, so much did he enjoy himself in the composition that he lost the commission to write the last two of the three works here after the publisher Hoffmeister found the first too intricate and difficult for the amateur market! (Hoffmeister did at least let the composer keep the advance he had received!) But his enthusiasm pushed him to write them anyway and what has come down to us makes a wonderful compendium of Mozart's genius, his resourceful technical felicity as well as that deft kaleidoscope of emotional narrative. Following the Leopold Trio's acclaimed renderings of the great String Divertimento (CDA67246), this release will for many be a revelation and for all of us a source of deep gratification. Paul Lewis, a pupil of Alfred Brendel and here making his Hyperion debut, is by training and temperament steeped in the Viennese classics, bringing to these special works both the authority and youthfulness they merit.