This recording of
Schubert's Wanderer Fantasie, D. 760, is hardly at risk of getting lost among all the other ones on the market; it's completely distinctive.
Endres' reading is almost devoid of the Viennese warmth and rhythmic momentum that are the norm for
Schubert, but in their place are details that are heard in wholly new ways. Look no further than the opening the Wanderer Fantasie itself, muscular yet subtle, for an example. Everywhere,
Endres chooses to destabilize rhythms in order to tease out details of voice-leading, and even the relatively simple triple meter of the second of the impromptu-like Three Piano Pieces, D. 946, is done in such a way that the music seems to float, not drive forward. These late works are less often performed than are the two full sets of
Schubert impromptus, but
Endres makes a good case for them as ambitious, motivically complex pieces. Even less familiar are the 13 Variations on a Theme by Hüttenbrenner, D. 576, from 1815, which have a theme so simple that it seems analogous to a few straight lines sketched on a page;
Endres catches the way the young
Schubert's slightly scary imagination immediately takes over. Also comparatively rare is the so-called Grazer Fantasie, the Fantasie in C major, D. 605a; it's a true quasi-improvisatory piece,
Schubert's version of the potpourris and display pieces performed by the touring virtuosi who passed through Vienna. The alla polacca middle section (track 2) does not come out particularly polonaise-like in
Endres' account, and in general listeners with a low tolerance for intellectual German approaches may be rubbed the wrong way by his playing. Take it for what it is, however, and the music has the uncanny quality of seeming quite different when heard multiple times. The engineering from the Oehms label is up to its usual high standard.