Composer: Antonín Dvořák
- Piano Trio No. 3 in F minor, Op. 65
- Piano Trio No. 4 in E minor "Dumky", Op. 90
Florestan Trio
Anthony Marwood, violin
Richard Lester, cello
Susan Tomes, piano
Date: 1996
Label: Hyperion
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A favourite and appropriate pairing – Dvorak’s most passionate chamber work in harness with one of his most genial. The F minor Piano Trio (1883) was contemporaneous with the death of Dvorak’s mother; it anticipates something of the storm and stress that characterizes the great D minor Seventh Symphony (1884-5) and I am happy to say that the Florestan Trio serve it well. Sensitivity is the keyword, especially in those shaded groves – questioning bridge passages or tender asides – that border the windblown main trail. The phrasing ebbs and flows, reflecting on urgency rather than going all out to re-enact it (as Heifetz et al do on their RCA recording). Listen, for example, to cellist Richard Lester’s warm-toned statement of the first movement’s second set (2'16'' into track 1), the way violinist Anthony Marwood follows suit or the eerie darkening that greets the onset of the development section (try from, say, 4'09'' to 4'38''). All three players allow themselves plenty of expressive leeway and yet the musical line is neither distorted nor stretched too far. The second movement Allegretto is truly grazioso (so many players overstate the case here), and the qualifying meno mosso perfectly judged. And when it comes to Anthony Marwood’s sweet-centred projection of the Brahmsian melody 4'04'' into the Poco adagio, you’d be hard pressed to find a more sensitive performance. The finale is buoyant rather than especially rustic, whereas the more overtly colourful Dumky Trio inspires a sense of play and a vivid suggestion of local colour – 2'45'' into the third movement, for example, or 1'25'' into the fourth. Throughout the performance, the manifest ‘song and dance’ elements of the score (heartfelt melodies alternating with folk-style faster music) are keenly projected.
Reservations? Virtually none, save that I would have welcomed rather more drama in the F minor Trio’s first movement. The recordings are first-rate, so is Jan Smaczny’s annotation and I would say that if you’re after a subtle, musically perceptive coupling of these two works, then you could hardly do better.
— Gramophone
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Antonín Dvořák (September 8, 1841 – May 1, 1904) was a Czech composer. He was the second Czech composer to achieve worldwide recognition, after Bedřich Smetana. Following Smetana's nationalist example, many of Dvořák's works show the influence of Czech folk music, such as his two sets of Slavonic Dances, the Symphonic Variations, and the overwhelming majority of his songs. Dvořák wrote in a variety of forms: nine symphonies, ten operas, three concertos, several symphonic poems, serenades for string orchestra and wind ensemble, more than 40 works of chamber music, and piano music.
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The Florestan Trio, founded in London in 1995, was one of the world's most-recorded piano trios. Renowned for their recordings on the Hyperion label, all their albums received critical acclaim and Gramophone Award nominations. Their Schumann disc won the 1999 Gramophone Award, and their French piano trios CD became a top-seller. Spanning composers from Mozart to Saint-Saëns, their recordings set high standards in chamber music. After sixteen successful years, the trio disbanded in 2011 as members pursued separate paths. Their final performances took place at London's Wigmore Hall in January 2012.
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