Piano Trio No. 1 (Mendelssohn)

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Piano Trio in D minor
No. 1
by Felix Mendelssohn
Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy.jpg
The composer in 1846
Key D minor
Opus 49
Composed1839 (1839)
Published1840 (1840)
Movementsfour

Felix Mendelssohn's Piano Trio No. 1 in D minor, Op. 49, was completed on 23 September 1839 and published the following year. The work is scored for a standard piano trio consisting of violin, cello and piano. It is one of Mendelssohn's most popular chamber works and is recognized as one of his greatest along with his Octet, Op. 20. During the initial composition of the work, Mendelssohn took the advice of fellow composer Ferdinand Hiller to revise the piano part. Hiller wrote, "with his usual conscientious earnestness when once he had made up his mind, he undertook the length and rewrite the whole pianoforte part." [1]

Contents

The revised version was in a more romantic, Schumannesque style with the piano given a more important role in the trio. Indeed, the revised piece was reviewed by Schumann, who declared Mendelssohn to be "the Mozart of the nineteenth century, the brightest musician, who most clearly understands the contradictions of the age and is the first to reconcile them." [2]

Historical Background

On January 21, 1832, while Mendelssohn was in Paris, he wrote a letter to his sister, Fanny Mendelssohn, about writing a work in which the piano takes a more active role in relation to the violin and cello. [3] The trio was premiered on February 1, 1840, at the Leipzig Gewandhaus by violinist Ferdinand David, cellist Franz Karl Witmann, and Mendelssohn at the piano. Robert Schumann praised the trio as "the master-trio of our time, even as Beethoven's B-flat and D and Schubert's E-flat at their time, this will delight to the future generation." [4] In 1898, the Musical Times had an interview with the violinist, Joseph Joachim, who recalled the performance in London in 1844, in which the composer was the pianist once again. At the time, only the violinist and cellists had their parts. Mendelssohn said, "never mind, just put a book on the piano and a person can turn from time to time, so I don't need to look as though I played by heart." [5]

Analysis

References

  1. Hefling, Stephen E. (1998). Ninettenth-Century: Chamber Music. New York and London: Routledge. pp. 192–193. ISBN   0415966507.
  2. Er ist der Mozart des 19ten Jahrhunderts, der hellste Musiker, der die Widersprüche der Zeit am klarsten durchschaut und zuerst versöhnt.
  3. Horton, John (1972). BBC Music Guides: Mendelssohn Chamber Music. University of Washington. p. 52. ISBN   0295952512.
  4. Keller, James M. (2011). Chamber Music: A Listener's Guide. New York: Oxford. p. 298. ISBN   9780195382532.
  5. Keller, James M. (2011). Chamber Music: A Listener's guide. New York: Oxford. p. 300. ISBN   9780195382532.
  6. Oinas, Cecilia (2017). 'Magic points' and evaded cadences: Analysis, performance, and their interaction in four opening piano trio movements of Felix Mendelssohn and Robert Schumann. Helsinki: The Sibelius Academy of the University of the Arts Helsinki. pp. 93–94. ISBN   9789523290792.