I listened to my new CD
of Albéric Magnard's sprawling but enjoyable piano trio. I
was annoyed; piano, cello and violin are notoriously difficult to
balance, especially in a recording. But here, Magnard was all cello
and piano, with poor Geneviève Laurenceau's violin squeaking in the
background in a sea of bass-derived mud. I was about to denounce the
recording and the CPO recording engineers, but when I switched later
to listening to the work via (good) headphones, the sound was fine,
and the mud had dissipated.
The problem would seem
to be the modern world's obsession with bass sound from loudspeakers.
Salesmen and advertisers alike extol the virtues of the “enhanced
bass sound” from their speakers. Enhanced bass sound is not good
for trios for cello, piano and violin. My loudspeakers are far from
cheap models, but I suspect that even buying speakers for £40,000 a
pair, or whatever, would only give me … enhanced bass. Why the
current population is so fixated on the bass line is something of a
mystery. My late father, a professional double-bass player all his
life, would be happy. It's a shame since, especially if more than one
person is listening to a piece of music, loudspeakers are so much
more convenient and user-friendly than sealing off the ears with
headphones. For lovers of piano trios, or violin and piano duos,
however, headphones are becoming de rigueur
The same CD also sees Geneviève Laurenceau playing Magnard's equally sprawling, but equally enjoyable, 41 minute sonata for violin and piano. Headphones on, again. It's a lovely performance.
No comments:
Post a Comment