HomeStore

Weinberg, Penderecki & Schnittke: String Trios / Trio Lirico

Weinberg, Penderecki & Schnittke: String Trios / Trio Lirico

The Trio Lirico has programmed three composers who lived and worked on the Eastern side of the Iron Curtain until 1989: for Franziska Pietsch and Sophia Reuter this is music which - paraphrasing Goethe - they "search with their souls". "As children, we both lived in East Berlin and were close friends already", Franziska Pietsch explains about her violist colleague. "We therefore share personal history, a similar style of playing and a similar non-verbal way of communicating about this music. We just feel it." This personal form of perception, into which the Bremen cellist Johannes Krebs blends empathetically, is not irrelevant for this music which becomes accessible not just via the text but also to a high degree via the cultural and political environment in which it was written. Of course Krzysztof Penderecki (b.1933), following the political liberalization of Polish music from 1956, had the opportunity to tie in with avant-garde developments in the West and to create his very own and unique modernism. On the other hand, his generational colleague Alfred Schnittke (1934-1998) and the older Mieczyslaw Weinberg (1919-1996) had, until the end of the Soviet Union, to assert their music in the face of massive harassment from the authorities which, in Weinberg's case, went as far as being arrested for anti-Semitic reasons. Born in Warsaw, Weinberg, who fled to the Soviet Union during the Second World War, kept in close contact with his friend and mentor Dmitri Shostakovich. Nonetheless, Weinberg's music is entirely unique, and his string trio of 1950 strikes a balance between popular tunes and references to Yiddish music. Alfred Schnittke, who found it hard gaining acceptance on account of his (Volga) German and Jewish heritage, composed his trio in 1985 for the birthday of his illustrious colleague Alban Berg - and, shortly after completing the work, suffered a life-threatening stroke, retrospectively lending this work a tragic note. The most recent work recorded here is by Poland's most eminent living composer, Krzysztof Penderecki: in 1991 he wrote his string trio as a great improvisation for three performers with a strict and wild fugue.
$7.35

Original: $20.99

-65%
Weinberg, Penderecki & Schnittke: String Trios / Trio Lirico

$20.99

$7.35
Product image 1
Product image 2

Description

The Trio Lirico has programmed three composers who lived and worked on the Eastern side of the Iron Curtain until 1989: for Franziska Pietsch and Sophia Reuter this is music which - paraphrasing Goethe - they "search with their souls". "As children, we both lived in East Berlin and were close friends already", Franziska Pietsch explains about her violist colleague. "We therefore share personal history, a similar style of playing and a similar non-verbal way of communicating about this music. We just feel it." This personal form of perception, into which the Bremen cellist Johannes Krebs blends empathetically, is not irrelevant for this music which becomes accessible not just via the text but also to a high degree via the cultural and political environment in which it was written. Of course Krzysztof Penderecki (b.1933), following the political liberalization of Polish music from 1956, had the opportunity to tie in with avant-garde developments in the West and to create his very own and unique modernism. On the other hand, his generational colleague Alfred Schnittke (1934-1998) and the older Mieczyslaw Weinberg (1919-1996) had, until the end of the Soviet Union, to assert their music in the face of massive harassment from the authorities which, in Weinberg's case, went as far as being arrested for anti-Semitic reasons. Born in Warsaw, Weinberg, who fled to the Soviet Union during the Second World War, kept in close contact with his friend and mentor Dmitri Shostakovich. Nonetheless, Weinberg's music is entirely unique, and his string trio of 1950 strikes a balance between popular tunes and references to Yiddish music. Alfred Schnittke, who found it hard gaining acceptance on account of his (Volga) German and Jewish heritage, composed his trio in 1985 for the birthday of his illustrious colleague Alban Berg - and, shortly after completing the work, suffered a life-threatening stroke, retrospectively lending this work a tragic note. The most recent work recorded here is by Poland's most eminent living composer, Krzysztof Penderecki: in 1991 he wrote his string trio as a great improvisation for three performers with a strict and wild fugue.

You may also like

NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

D. Scarlatti: Sonatas

$13.99

NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Strum: Music for Strings

$18.99

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Royal Rhymes and Rounds

$14.99

$5.25

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Telemann: Lukas Passion, 1748 / Max, Rheinische Kantorei, Das Kleine Konzert

$36.99

$12.95

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Brahms: Late Piano Music Opp. 76, 79 & 116-119 / Owen

$22.99

$8.05

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Songs for Strings / Fraser, English Symphony & English Chamber Orchestras

$14.99

$5.25

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Eberl: Piano Sonata Op. 27; Variations / Marie-luise Hinrichs

$13.99

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Czerny: Violin Sonatas / Lessing, Kuerti, Klaas

$13.99

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Songs of Orpheus / Sulayman, Sorrell, Apollo's Fire

$14.99

$5.25

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Mark Twain Tonight (Hal Holbrook)

$8.99

NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Wandering Moon

$8.99

NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Spohr, L.: Double String Quartets, Vol. 1 - Nos. 1 and 2

$13.99