Guest review by Anthony Hardwicke
Rosendal Chamber Music Festival – Day 3 afternoon
Some of the highlights from Saturday afternoon’s concerts at the Rosendal Chamber Music Festival included a symphonic Brahms string quintet Op.111, a fresh and compelling performance of Clara Schumann’s G minor Piano Trio, and a memorable and overwhelming Brahms Piano Quartet No. 3 in C Minor Op.60, with Tabea Zimmerman calling the shots, but Sheku Kanneh-Mason predictably stealing the show with the big cello tune in the slow movement.
An all-star cast of James Ehnes and Guro Kleven Hagen on violins, Tabea Zimmerman and Ida Bryan on violas and Julia Hagen on cello enjoyed Brahms Op.111. The blend and balance was excellent and the overall sound was like an excitingly agile string orchestra. The dynamic range was impressive, especially in the outer movements. Zimmerman was at the centre of all the good communication. The last movement grew steadily to a bustling climax.
Clara Schumann’s G minor Piano Trio sounded light and fresh in the hands of an all-female trio of Yoel-Eum Son (piano), Guro Kleven Hagen (violin) and Julia Hagen (cello). The strings were very together in the unison passages in the first movement. There was plenty of detail in Guro Kleven Hagen’s beautifully shaped melodic phrases. She is not a showy player, sparing in her use of vibrato and always tasteful. Son didn’t have much to do in the slow movement, but got a chance to say more in the last movement with some deliciously judged arpeggios and graceful pedalling.

As the Artistic Director of the Rosendal Chamber Music Festival, Leif Ove Andsnes attracts the most astonishingly superb musicians every year. Every one of the 11 concerts features several chamber works with different combinations of players and I have found it fascinating to see who plays well with whom. One particularly successful grouping was Bertrand Chamayou (piano), Guro Kleven Hagen (violin), Tabea Zimmerman (viola) and Sheku Kanneh-Mason (cello) and they served up a sumptuous Brahms C minor Piano Quartet to die for (actually it’s all about death). The first movement was rich and orchestral, with the strings competing to see who could produce the darkest, most malevolent tone. The piano gets more thematic material in the second movement and it was delivered immaculately by an authoritative Chamayou. And then comes the big cello tune at the beginning of the slow movement. Kanneh-Mason allowed it to speak and grow with intuitive emotion. It was a beautiful moment of discovery and the audience were holding back the tears. The last movement had shape and structure. Zimmerman controlled the strings with her dark tone, leading towards the exhausted and desolate final page.
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