Artist(s):
Gould Piano Trio,
Rachmaninov
Trio Elegique in G minor, No 1
Tchaikovsky
Trio in A minor, Op 50
A brand new recording of the outstanding Gould Trio (Lucy Gould violin, Alice Neary cello, Benjamin Frith piano) performing Tchaikovsky's Trio in A minor, Op.50 and Rachmaninov's Trio élégiaque No. 1 in G minor.
Tchaikovsky wrote comparatively little chamber music, yet his Piano Trio in A minor, op. 50, with its kaleidoscopic succession of moods, is probably the first important piano trio by a Russian composer. This work is a big, ambitious piece in which the composer sets himself a multitude of challenges in what was for him a new medium. The Trio did not take long to make its way into the repertoire, where it still stands as one of the supreme examples of the piano trio in the Romantic era.
Tchaikovskyʼs Trio, with its function as a memorial for Nikolai Rubinstein, seems to have initiated a Russian tradition of ʻelegiacʼ piano trios. The young Sergei Rachmaninov composed his first, the Trio élégiaque No. 1 in G minor, at white-hot speed between 18 and 21 January 1892. Not surprisingly, Rachmaninov assigns pride of place to the piano, making the Trio almost a miniature piano concerto. It opens with murmuring, wind-blown string figures, creating an evocative background to the pianoʼs dolorous main theme, soon taken up by the strings. In similarity to the Tchaikovsky, the work concludes with an impressively gloomy funeral march.