Mayer’s quartets reveal a creative spirit

14 min read

Constanze Quartet paint a rich and dramatic portrait, says Rebecca Franks

CHAMBER CHOICE

Sensitively handled: Constanze Quartet’s first volume of Mayer quartets is a winner

E Mayer

String Quartets in G major, A major and E minor

Constanze Quartett

CPO 555600-2 71:41 mins

A ‘diary, the story of his soul’, was how Shostakovich’s string quartets were once described, and so often the quartet is where composers turn to explore something personal. Emilie Mayer (1812-83) had eight symphonies to her name but, after finding that her gender hampered her orchestral music gaining public performances, she turned to chamber music. The string quartet offered, perhaps, a place for her to forget the restrictions of 19th-century society.

Whatever the impulse, the result is a joy to discover. Mayer is thought to have written seven quartets, three of which, from the 1850s, appear on this wonderful recording. The Constanze Quartett has done a fine job in showing this music off at its best, with sensitive, handsome playing, beautifully recorded by CPO, a record label that has long championed rare repertoire.

The programme opens with the uplifting G major Quartet, her answer to Beethoven. Mayer, meanwhile, had a soft spot for her A major Quartet, whose ‘appealing melodic character’ was praised by the Neue Berliner Musikzeitung. And it is a thoroughly appealing work, not least thanks to its Adagio which contrasts serenity with bittersweetness. In both works, the Constanze’s sound is warm and well-blended, with plenty of space for individual lines to shine.

Yet it’s the E minor Quartet which reveals Mayer at her most striking. Two versions exist; it’s the second played here. In its handling of motifs and harmonic shifts, it sits alongside Beethoven and Schubert, and the Constanzes treat it as pure drama. Terse and melancholic, it’s a quartet that reveals a powerful creative spirit.

PERFORMANCE ★★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

You can access thousands of reviews from our extensive archive on the BBC Music Magazine website at www.classical-music.com

Chaminade • Poulenc

• R Schumann

Poulenc: Cello Sonata*;

R Schumann: Papillons; Violin Sonata No. 1 in A minor†;

Chaminade: Piano Trio No. 1*†

Martina Consonni (piano), †Sarah Jégou-Sageman (violin),
*Jeein You (cello)

Erato 5419764269 70:09 mins

Gautier Capuçon’s foundation for emerging young musicians is an admirable initiative which includes the opportunity to record an album; this instalment presents three graduates of the 2022 programme. Bringing them together is Chaminade’s Piano Trio No. 1, a substantial and dramatic work in the Brahmsian mode which shows off thei