“These fine performances make a strong case for them.” Sunday Times, 6th April 2014
“Everything sounds as though it has been thought through extensively...The Takács's Brahms is like a superbly engineered road: we always know where we're going, and the views can be magnificent, but there are some interesting contours hidden beneath the tarmac.” BBC Music Magazine, May 2014 ****
“Everything sounds as though it has been thought through extensively...The Takács's Brahms is like a superbly engineered road: we always know where we're going, and the views can be magnificent, but there are some interesting contours hidden beneath the tarmac.” BBC Music Magazine, May 2014 ****

Fortunately, the Takács Quartet and Lawrence Power show every indication of having given a lot of thought to both works. Everything sounds as though it has been thought through extensively. The fascinatingly fluid slow-movement-plus-scherzo that forms the centrepiece of the First Quintet is beautifully conceived. The impassioned, long opening paragraph of the Second is a magnificent balance of rich tonal weight and soaring momentum (perfectly caught by the recording); the Adagio is darkly eloquent and the finale’s rhythms are clean-cut and full of springing vitality. What we don’t get are the Romantic shadows and elf-lights, or the tender, sensitive Brahms half-hidden behind the bluff assertion. The Second Quintet’s Un poco allegretto—more ghostly waltz than scherzo or minuet—is finely wrought but lacking in subtler nuance. The Takács’s Brahms is like a superbly engineered road: we ahvays know where we’re going, and the views can be magnificent, but there are some interesting contours hidden beneath the tarmac." --BBC Music Magazine, May 2014 ****
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Brahms Johannes