The Mendelssohn Legacy - Piano Trios
£19.90
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Label: Naive
Cat No: V8972
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 2
Genre: Chamber
Release Date: 3rd October 2025
Contents
Works
Piano Trio in D minor, op.11A Midsummer Night's Dream: Incidental Music, op.61
Piano Trio in C minor, op.66
Piano Trio in D minor, op.49
Songs without Words (Lieder ohne Worte): Book 2, op.30
Artists
Trio ZadigWorks
Piano Trio in D minor, op.11A Midsummer Night's Dream: Incidental Music, op.61
Piano Trio in C minor, op.66
Piano Trio in D minor, op.49
Songs without Words (Lieder ohne Worte): Book 2, op.30
Artists
Trio ZadigAbout
In the Trio Zadig's hands, the sister's work, composed between 1846 and 1847, a few months before her premature death, impresses with the singular structural balance. Notably the Allegro molto vivace is a real pearl which alternates moments of subtle nostalgia with an elegant drama, among some tempestuous and thoughtful writing.
Impossible not to be captivated, moreover, by the freshness of the Andante espressivo. Here the three players reveal a theme of majesty and tenderness, slightly reminiscent of Beethoven. The following Lied will remind the listener that the Mendelssohn household was nourished by J.S. Bach's protestant spirit.
In truth, the same creative lifeblood flowed in the veins of both sister and brother. Having grown up in a household where one learned music like another language, Felix and Fanny were each other’s first audiences, first critics and eternal confidants. These exciting yet reflective performances by the Trio Zadig (violinist Miclen LaiPang, cellist Marc Girard Garcia and pianist Guillaume Vincent) in the first place pay due respect to this common ground. From Felix's famous first Piano Trio, likewise in D minor, gushes in effect the same fundamental warmth, the same calm mastery, and the second Piano Trio, with its subtly measured storms and its gently restless flavour, recalls Fanny's contemporaneous work of 1845.
In a nod to the culture of reciprocal inspiration which of course was at the heart of Mendelssohn’s Berlin home, and which recalls their own life as rehearsing, travelling and performing chamber musicians, sharing almost everything together, the Trio Zadig completes its programme with two of Felix's more intimate works; one taken from the second volume of the Lieder ohne Worte, transcribed for piano trio by Cyrille Lehn, and the other the Notturno from A Midsummer Night's Dream, in a rare nineteenth century transcription. And - surprise, surprise - a mouth-watering encore, the extremely touching Trio composed by Felix at the age of eleven, a somewhat Haydn-like pastiche, and an utter marvel.
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