Further Reading
4th April 2025
The pianist joins violinist Maria Nowak, violist Katarzyna Budnik and cellist Yuya Okamoto in earnest yet refined accounts of Brahms's Piano Quartets Nos. 2 and 3.
Pianist Krystian Zimerman’s latest album reflects a love of chamber music that dates back to his childhood. With colleagues Maria Nowak (violin), Katarzyna Budnik (viola) and Yuya Okamoto (cello) he has chosen to record two of Brahms’s three piano quartets: No. 2 in A major and No. 3 in C minor. Zimerman convinced his friends that they should not focus on No. 1 in G minor, the best- known of the three, for precisely that reason, challenging them to “play No. 2 and No. 3 and make them the most famous!” Their album will be released by Deutsche Grammophon on 4 April 2025, digitally, on CD and on vinyl (2 LPs). The third-movement Andante from Quartet No. 3 will be available from 10 January, followed by the Scherzo from the same work on 7 March.
It was Zimerman’s father, a keen amateur pianist, who instilled a love of chamber music in his young son. He would invite friends to the family home in southern Poland to play everything from Strauss waltzes to transcriptions of Mahler symphonies. Krystian began by listening and page-turning, but was soon joining in on the piano. “It was a fantastic experience to feel this passion for making music together and to be part of it,” he recalls. The instant fame resulting from his victory at the 1975 Chopin Competition briefly took him away from chamber music, but he found a way to incorporate it into his life again, and over the last five decades has collaborated with violinists Kyung-Wha Chung, Kaja Danczowska and Gidon Kremer, among many others.
The four musicians performing here have been quartet colleagues since 2019. Zimerman met Maria
Nowak and Katarzyna Budnik through their orchestral activities in Poland, while he first heard cellist
Yuya Okamoto playing in a competition. The chemistry and power of communication between the
four players proved to be ideal – “it worked right away,” says Zimerman, “from the first minute we
got together”. As for the choice of repertoire for this album, they tried “all kinds of experiments”
before deciding on Brahms’s Second and Third Quartets. “I wanted something challenging,” notes
the pianist, “and I particularly love the Third Quartet.”
Brahms’s Piano Quartet No. 2 in A major, Op. 26 is a work on a vast scale. Cast in four movements, it
was composed in 1862 and premiered by Brahms and members of the Hellmesberger Quartet.
Zimerman and friends bring out its contrasting moods with the utmost clarity, from the sombreness
of the second-movement Poco adagio to the dancelike Hungarian rhythms of the finale.
The Third Piano Quartet in C minor, Op. 60 took Brahms almost 20 years to complete. Its original
inspiration was his unrequited love for Clara Schumann – the composer hinted several times that the
work was a portrayal of Goethe’s tragic hero Werther, who kills himself over his own impossible love
for a married woman. Having begun the work in the mid-1850s, Brahms reworked it in 1873-74,
creating a new slow movement and finale. The former, an Andante in E major, is centred around a
poetic cello theme. This was performed at the 1875 premiere by the famous virtuoso David Popper,
with the other members of the quartet again including the composer himself at the piano.