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Piano Trios
Vadim Gluzman, Johannes Moser, Yevgeny Sudbin
Piano Trios
Genre: Classical
 
In Russian chamber music, a rather special tradition evolved around the piano trio, with a number of composers turning to the genre to write instrumental requiems. First out was Tchaikovsky with his Piano Trio in A minor, ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Vadim Gluzman, Johannes Moser, Yevgeny Sudbin
Title: Piano Trios
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Bis
Release Date: 10/4/2019
Album Type: Hybrid SACD - DSD
Genre: Classical
Style: Chamber Music
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1

Synopsis

Product Description
In Russian chamber music, a rather special tradition evolved around the piano trio, with a number of composers turning to the genre to write instrumental requiems. First out was Tchaikovsky with his Piano Trio in A minor, Op. 50, à la mémoire dun grand artiste, and he was followed by composers such as Rachmaninov, Arensky and Shostakovich. In the case of Tchaikovskys trio, the grand artiste was the pianist Nikolai Rubinstein, and Tchaikovsky chose the trio genre as he felt that a piece for solo piano would be too lightweight and one with orchestral accompaniment would be too showy. The work is in two movements, a Pezzo elegiaco (elegiac piece) and a set of variations, and it begins with the cello playing a moving lament which sets the tone for the entire first movement. The theme returns at the end of the second movement in the form of an impassioned funeral march. Seventy years later, when the Armenian composer and pianist Arno Babajanian (192183) wrote his Piano Trio in F sharp minor, he didnt give it any subtitle, but theres a grandeur and breadth of scale which rivals Tchaikovskys work and the second movement is thoroughly elegiac in character. The trio is Babajanians best-known work, composed in the Romantic style of Rachmaninov, but also rooted in Armenian folk music, melodically as well as rhythmically. Performing the two works are Vadim Gluzman and Yevgeny Sudbin, both with Russian roots, joined by cellist Johannes Moser, and the three close the album with Sudbins arrangement of a brief Tango by Alfred Schnittke.