Tag: Piano Trio

  • Happy Birthday Daron Hagen Music Showcase

    Happy Birthday Daron Hagen Music Showcase

    Happy birthday, Daron Hagen! I know it’s a round one; I hope it’s a good one. Thank you for following this page.

    P.S. I love your library (which I found on Facebook)!

    Piano Trio No. 3 “Wayfaring Stranger” (2006)

    “The Moment That a Bird Takes Flight” from “Amelia” (2009)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kAN4SNHI_kc

    Sky Interlude No. 3 from “Amelia” (2009)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92zk_UBRiIY

    “The Lamb,” after William Blake (2016)

    “Sarabande” from “Suite for Piano” (2009)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3LVT0mAUZC8

    From “Songbook: Concerto for Violin and Orchestra” (2011)

    “Orson Rehearsed” (2018)

    The composer in his library:

  • Ravel, Les Six, and Marlboro’s French Trios

    Ravel, Les Six, and Marlboro’s French Trios

    Maurice Ravel’s Piano Trio in A minor had been gestating for at least six years before he finally sat down to write the work over the summer of 1914. At first, progress was slow, but when war was declared in August, Ravel put on a burst of speed to finish the piece so that he could he could do his patriotic duty and enlist in the French army. He was rejected from the infantry and the air force on account of his diminutive size and precarious health, but he learned to drive a truck and cared for the wounded at Verdun on the Western Front.

    We’ll hear Ravel’s Piano Trio on this week’s “Music from Marlboro,” alongside a couple of other trios by composers of the next generation – Francis Poulenc and Darius Milhaud – both of whom had complex reactions to Ravel’s music.

    Poulenc and Milhaud together formed one-third of Les Six, that collective of French composers who rose to prominence in Paris in the late ‘teens and 1920s. Each had his or her own distinctive style – the group’s other members included Arthur Honegger, Georges Auric, Germaine Tailleferre, and Louis Durey – but together they displayed a united front in resistance to the so-called Impressionists (Debussy and Ravel) and most of all Richard Wagner. Any trace of Wagnerian portentousness would be blown out between the tent flaps, as the spirit of the circus, café and cabaret came to dominate a new aesthetic.

    You’ll hear it embodied in Poulenc’s Trio for Oboe, Bassoon and Piano (1926), which begins very somberly indeed, before taking off with irrepressible joie de vivre. The central movement is both elegant and wistful in a manner characteristic of this composer, and the cheeky finale is presented with an ironic smile.

    Interestingly, Milhaud’s Suite for Clarinet, Violin and Piano (1936) revisits material from incidental music he composed for Jean Anouilh’s play “Le Voyageur sans bagages” (“The Traveler without Luggage”), about an amnesiac World War I soldier. The piece falls into four movements: “Ouverture;” “Divertissement;” “Jeu;” and “Introduction et Final.” As the titles suggest, much of the music is sassy and full of play, and it is to be wondered what Ravel, a veteran of the Great War would have thought of it.

    I hope you’ll join me for a trio of French trios, performed by musicians of the legendary Marlboro Music Festival, this Wednesday evening at 6 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical NetworkWWFM The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page


    PHOTO: Ravel in uniform

  • Ravel’s Trio & Rediscovering Casella

    Ravel’s Trio & Rediscovering Casella

    One hundred years ago today, the world was introduced to Maurice Ravel’s Piano Trio in A Minor. It was first performed in Paris by Gabriel Wilaume, violin, Louis Feuillard, cello, and at the keyboard, none other than the composer Alfredo Casella.

    To be able to hear any of Casella’s own music in concert these days is a rarity, but it was just announced yesterday that his Symphony No. 2 will feature on a concert next season by The Philadelphia Orchestra. Gianandrea Noseda will conduct. Last season, he directed the orchestra in a colorful suite from Casella’s opera, “La donna serpente” (“The Snake Woman”).

    The composer’s star may have faded, but his music has been increasingly present in recordings in recent years. A figure of the so-called “generazione dell’ottanta” (“Generation of ’80” – a group of composers born around 1880 – alongside Gian Francesco Malipiero, Ildebrando Pizzetti, Franco Alfano and Ottorino Respighi), Casella impressed music-loving Philadelphians of an earlier era to the extent that his Serenata, Op. 46, split the vote in a chamber music contest held by The Musical Fund Society in 1926. The rest of the prize money went to Béla Bartók, for his String Quartet No. 3.

    Casella’s “Concerto Romano” was inspired by the Wanamaker Organ.

    Here’s Ravel’s Piano Trio (with Yehudi Menuhin, Gaspar Cassadó and Louis Kentner):

    And the first movement of Casella’s Serenata for Clarinet, Bassoon, Trumpet, Violin and Cello:

    PHOTO: Casella in spats!

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