Arensky & Taneyev: Piano Quintets

Two chamber masterpieces from nineteenth-century Russia, performed by Piers Lane and the Goldner String Quartet.

Taneyev has been known as the ‘Russian Brahms’ and this epithet is particularly apposite when considering his Piano Quintet in G minor, especially as regards both its instrumental writing and its intellectual passion. Composed in 1911, this massive work bids fair for the accolade of the greatest work in the Russian piano-chamber repertoire before Shostakovich’s Piano Quintet of 1940. Only the extravagance of its technical demands can explain its failure to establish itself in the standard repertoire.

Arensky’s Piano Quintet of 1900 is less monumental and less flamboyant, though not exactly short of fireworks, especially in the piano writing. It is a deeply attractive and enjoyable work—and equally little-known on the concert platform.

CDA67965  68 minutes 11 seconds
INTERNATIONAL RECORD REVIEW 'OUTSTANDING' AWARD
‘Taneyev's Piano Quintet is an expansive work, warmly played here and with the subtle intelligence he demanded of himself when planning a work … Arensky's Quintet has the lightness of touch that ...
‘The elevated intelligence and romantic intensity of Taneyev's writing, laid out here on an almost epic scale, are amply reflected by Piers Lane and the Goldner Quartet, as is Arensky's blend of rigou ...
‘Here is yet another fabulous performance of unfamiliar repertory to grace the remarkable Hyperion catalogue … this is a work which has been neglected for too long. As David Fanning writes, 'this ...