Zarębski: Piano Quintet Op 34; Żeleński: Piano Quartet Op 61

Two important chamber works from 19th-century Poland, in quality equivalent perhaps to Dvořák and Brahms, but completely unknown outside their native country.

Zarebski was a virtuoso pianist, more feted during much of his short life as a performer than a composer. However his Piano Quintet is truly a masterpiece, demonstrating an originality and stature that match and even surpass better-known piano quintets by better-known composers. It shows a remarkably fresh ear for symphonic thinking, motivic development and sheer melodic invention. Zelenski was a teacher rather than a performer, ending his distinguished academic career as Director of the Conservatory in his home town of Krakow. His Piano Quartet is a passionate, lyrical work, combining the Romanticism of Mendelssohn and Schumann with a piquant Slavic element.

The Szymanowski Quartet—half Polish, half Ukrainian—and honorary Pole Jonathan Plowright are the ideal performers of this music.

CDA67905  71 minutes 6 seconds
BBC MUSIC MAGAZINE CHAMBER CHOICE
INTERNATIONAL PIANO MAGAZINE CHOICE
‘Hyperion's useful coupling of the Zarębski with Żeleński's quartet makes this disc specially welcome and the playing is first-rate’ (Gramophone)
‘An outstanding account of Zarębski's Piano Quintet, capturing the score's emotional intensity … a performance of passionate warmth … making this recording doubly valuable is the even rarer ...
‘Zarębski's Piano Quintet confirms a feel for Lisztian harmony allied to a commanding formal sense that should have been the springboard into an eventful maturity and, even so, is not so far behind th ...