![]() ![]() They then winningly set a jaunty mood for the finale, which is maintained whenever the main theme reappears, even though, as always with late Schubert, much happens to vary the music’s mood and atmosphere including the reprise of the main cello theme from the slow movement, brightly decorated by the violin and piano. The canonic Minuet/Scherzo is genially Viennese and is handled here with a remarkably wide dynamic range, with the Trio agreeably boisterous, yet with contrasting moments of intimacy when the repeated-note theme from the first movement reappears. You can easily pick these ideas out, for the performance includes the exposition repeat. ![]() The dramatically rhythmic opening of the first movement (like the B flat Trio before it) could almost be by Beethoven, but once again these players show themselves to be completely within the Schubertian sensibility and catch perfectly the atmosphere of the more important lyrical motif, first heard on the cello (in bars 15 and 16), which is to dominate the movement alongside the engaging repeated-note figure (so delicately articulated by the piano (1'00"). Its essential melancholy is gently caught, first by the cellist, Richard Lester, and then equally touchingly by the pianist, Susan Tomes (0'56"). We are instantly reminded of this in the Florestan’s eloquent and aptly paced account of the C minor Andante con moto, with what Richard Wigmore describes as its ‘stoical trudging gait’. This was written in the same month (November) that Schubert completed Winterreise. Rather as Schubert himself did in the closing months of 1827, the Florestan Trio swiftly follow their illuminating account of the B flat Trio (Hyperion, 3/02) with the more profound, yet still often light-hearted E flat Trio. ![]()
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