All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Mendelssohn: Piano Trios Nos. 1 & 2
Mendelssohn composed his first Piano Trio, Op. 49 in 1839, during a very happy phase in his life and it has become one of his most popular chamber works. Six years later, he composed his Trio in C minor Op.66 and gave it to his sister Fanny as a birthday present. The Bonnard Trio was founded in 2004 and is named after the French painter Pierre Bonnard whose expressionist paintings inspired the musicians. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Anne-Sophie Mutter play Mendelssohn
“The usual things: technical perfection; febrile, vibrato-heavy emotions; strength . . . Her "wired" playing style is especially notable in the chamber pieces, partly because of André Previn, her piano partner . . . his fingers are admirably clean and agile even at the swiftest speeds . . . Lynn Harrell, Mutter’s cello colleague, maintains an appealing velvet throb in the Trio . . . [Concerto]: you can feel the adrenalin pumping . . . the German superstar, pirouetting nicely with a burnished tone, nervous rhythms, a furious finale and a vibrating, skylark andante” The Times, London | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mendelssohn - Piano Trios Nos. 1 & 2
The Trio writes: “ Only by risking a no-holds barred, utmost surrender to Mendelssohn’s seemingly “unreasonable” demands can one gain access to this music’s unrestrained, radical subjectiveness, its will to express itself in a thoroughly unique, individual manner….Demanding the utmost, its claim to sheer perfection will always remain a challenge to the performer.” | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Anne-Sophie Mutter plays Mendelssohn
1CD+DVD Anne-Sophie Mutter presents a unique combined DVD/CD project produced at Mendelssohn’s home town of Leipzig and in Vienna to celebrate his 200th birth anniversary in 2009 (3 February). The extremely popular Violin Concerto was recorded live in concert at the Gewandhaus under the direction of Kurt Masur, and the chamber music at the beautiful Brahms-Saal in the Vienna Musikverein The release will offer a state-of-the-art audio recording plus a separate full-length DVD that also includes a documentary, and comes in a Super Jewel Box Plus. Over 25 years after her first recording of the Mendelssohn Concerto with Herbert von Karajan, Anne-Sophie Mutter has a fresh, stunning, (fast) new take on one of the most popular concertos in the violin repertoire. Kurt Masur at her side is ideal, the most knowledgeable and experienced Mendelssohn interpreter alive. As the long-time chief conductor of Mendelssohn’s own orchestra (Gewandhaus 1835-1847) he stands for a great tradition and sound. With the Piano Trio No. 1 and the Sonata Anne-Sophie Mutter has chosen masterpieces from Mendelssohn’s chamber music repertoire to broaden the picture. Here too she collaborates with long-term chamber music partners: André Previn and Lynn Harrell. “…in the Concerto Mutter takes the opening Allegro molto appassionato at face value and goes on from there. Tempos are variable, but always with reason, and bowing likewise. But as always, the basic sound is beauty itself and of course the technical challenges are met with total ease. The Trio has a few inelegant moments, Previn missing one note altogether in an otherwise fleet performance, but the F major Sonata of 1838 comes over with great élan.” BBC Music Magazine, April 2009 ***** “It's impossible not to be impressed by Mutter's playing - here and throughout the disc. Every last detail has been dissected and considered, every phrase is minutely shaded; the subtleties of her bowing could in themselves fill a review.” Gramophone Magazine, May 2009 “We always know who the star is, and it’s the German superstar, pirouetting nicely with a burnished tone, nervous rhythms, a furious finale and a vibrating, skylark andante.
Will this interpretation zoom to the top of the CD mountain? Not right to the top: even with the finale’s authentic heat and Mutter’s feeling for Mendelssohn’s volatility, spontaneity is pipped by her glamour and power. Still, there are always the photos of that blue dress.” The Times, 13th February 2009 *** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Isaac Stern plays Mendelssohn
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| |  | Mendelssohn - Piano Trios
“…The three superb musicians on this new recording, all in their twenties, face the hefty competition easily by playing with an irresistible spontaneity. They approach these works as interior high dramas; contested between melancholy and ecstasy…they play with an unassailable precision.” Alan Kozinn, The New York Times “It's good to hear these great works played with full ardour by such a talented group of young musicians.” BBC Music Magazine, October 2006 **** “Chamber music with star players doesn't always work: lack of rehearsal time or oversized egos can often lead to performances high on surface glitz but low on understanding. Not here though: these young artists, already making waves in their individual careers, give us a recording of Mendelssohn's delectable piano trios that sparkles and fizzes from the outset. The opening of the D minor Trio No 1 is a touch simpler than the Florestan's recent acclaimed reading but its urgency sweeps you along. They are particularly fine in the scherzi of both trios, with delightful portamenti in the D minor which seem to say 'look how easy this is'. In the finale, the new trio set off at a dancing pace; the Florestan are a touch steadier, which makes for an even more explosive contrast as the movement hots up. The C minor Trio has long lived in the shadow of the D minor. It's darker, slower to reveal its secrets. The new version fully captures its ruggedness, the way that melodies are hewn from the musical material, rather than simply emerging complete as in No 1. The only real quibble is their spacious tempo for the second movement, a Venetian gondola song in all but name. It's played with great tenderness but does seem rather over-extended. All in all, this new recording is irresistible, with the three players caught in a wholly natural ambience. It's always a good sign when you don't want to stop playing a disc long enough to write about it.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 “…these young artists, already making waves in their individual careers, give us a recording of Mendelssohn's delectable piano trios that sparkles and fizzes from the outset. They are particularly fine in the scherzi of both trios, with delightful portamenti in the D minor which seem to say "look how easy this is".” Gramophone Magazine, October 2006 CD Review
Critics Disc of the Year - December 2007 |
| | | (also available to download from $10.50) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mendelssohn - The Piano Trios
“With its unforgettable opening cello theme, the D minor First has always been the more favoured of the two. But in a performance as subtle and impassioned as the Florestan's, the C minor Second seems at least as fine. The powerful, almost Brahmsian first movement alone should give the lie to the cliché that Mendelssohn's genius declined irredeemably after the brilliance of youth. While always keeping the potentially dense textures lucid (Susan Tomes's refined, singing tone and articulation a constant pleasure), the Florestan play this with a mingled fire and lyrical tenderness that it's hard to imagine bettered. The flowing barcarolle slow movement has a crucial quality of innocence, and the flickering nocturnal Scherzo is as delicate and pointed as you could wish, at a tempo close to Mendelssohn's optimistically fast marking, while the Chamber Mendelssohn 736 finale drives impulsively towards its triumphant chorale apotheosis, grandly inevitable rather than bombastic. From the yearning opening, the great cello melody surging across the barlines, the Florestan are equally vivid in the D minor Trio. Scrupulously observant, as ever, of Mendelssohn's detailed dynamic markings, they make you more than usually aware of how much of the music is held down to piano and pianissimo; and the moment at the start of the recapitulation, where Richard Lester's warm cello is counterpoised with violinist Anthony Marwood's fragile, floated descant, is as magical as you will hear. Again the Florestan favour an easily flowing tempo for the song-without-words slow movement, phrasing in long spans (uncommonly pure, luminous duetting from Marwood and Lester) and finding a touch of playfulness when the main theme returns. Just as fine are the irresistible airborne Scherzo and the finale, where the Florestan, taking note of the qualifying unpoco tranquillo, make the opening march unusually pensive before sweeping forward with an authentically Mendelssohnian mix of restless agitation, grace and lyrical fervour. Pleasure in these superb performances is enhanced by a beautifully natural recording and Robert Philip's detailed, illuminating notes.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 “What immediately impresses about these performances by the Florestan Trio is the lightness and clarity of the playing, with Susan Tomes characteristically sparing in her use of pedal. …this well-recorded new disc offers exceptionally fine accounts of these two great works.” BBC Music Magazine, October 2005 “With its unforgettable opening cello theme, the D minor First has always been the more favoured of the two. But in a performance as subtle and impassioned as the Florestan's, the C minor Second seems at least as fine. The powerful, almost Brahmsian first movement alone should give the lie to the cliché that Mendelssohn's genius declined irredeemably after the brilliance of youth. ...the Florestan play this with a mingled fire and lyrical tenderness that I have never heard bettered. From the yearning opening, the great cello melody surging across the barlines, the Florestan are equally vivid in the D minor Trio. Pleasure in these superb performances is enhanced by a beautifully natural recording and Robert Philip's detailed, illuminating notes.” Gramophone Magazine, February 2006 “Dazzling playing from this splendid ensemble puts the Florestan Trio at the very top of the list for these attractive and much-recorded works. The freshness of response and the virtuosity of the pianist, the inimitable Susan Tomes, make this coupling pretty irresistable.” Penguin Guide, 2011 edition | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mendelssohn: Piano Trios
Isaac Stern (violin), Leonard Rose (cello), Eugene Istomin (piano) | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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