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Complete Piano Trios vol. 1
Ludwig van Beethoven

Complete Piano Trios vol. 1

Van Baerle Trio

Label: Challenge Classics
Format: SACD
Barcode: 0608917276527
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Catalog number: CC 72765
Releasedate: 03-11-17

- Here is the first volume of a complete survey of Beethoven’s Piano Trios
- The young Van Baerle trio embarked on this journey, starting with Beethoven’s youth works

- This recording was made using a Chris Maene Concert Grand built in 2017.
- This remarkable instrument combines the knowledge and materials used in modern piano building with those found in older historical instruments.

- Van Baerle Trio is led by Challenge Classics pianist Hannes Minnaar and has already received international competitions awards and press honors

- Their previous release on Challenge (Mendelssohn – CC 72662) got Five Stars by Fono Forum and was rated 10 by Luister Magazine (the Netherlands)
 

Beethoven’s primary reason for settling in Vienna in 1792 was to study with Joseph Haydn, who at the time was widely considered the greatest living composer. Beethoven’s three Piano Trios op. 1 were the first compositions that he deemed important enough to give an opus number. They were dedicated to Prince Karl Lichnowsky, a patron of Beethoven in whose house he lived for some time. According to Beethoven’s lifelong friend Ferdinand Ries, Haydn was complimentary about the set of trios. The trios combine various elements that would have been familiar to Beethoven’s contemporaries. Less familiar, however, would be the fact that the trios contain four movements rather than the three that had been traditional in this genre. Although changes from major to minor had been common in the music of previous generations, where they would normally apply to just the last chord, Beethoven employs this technique more extensively here than was probably common at that time.

Much like op. 1, the Trio op. 11 is also connected to the Viennese nobility of the time. Beethoven cleverly dedicated it to Maria Wilhelmine Countess of Thun-Hohenstein. In other ways, too, Beethoven tried to make this a particularly attractive publication for the Viennese public: the trio could be performed with a clarinet instead of a violin, a flexible approach to instrumentation that would doubtless increase its marketability. In addition, the last movement consists of a theme from Joseph Weigl’s comic opera L'amor marinaro, followed by a series of variations. At the time when Beethoven wrote this trio, Weigl’s opera was very popular in Vienna.

This recording was made using a Chris Maene Concert Grand built in 2017.
This remarkable instrument combines the knowledge and materials used in modern piano building with those found in older historical instruments. The most striking feature is that unlike in modern grand pianos, in which the strings in the bass and middle registers cross, in this instrument all strings run parallel to each other. As a result, it combines the solidity of a modern concert grand piano with the transparent sound ideal of older instruments. The sound of this symbiosis of old and new was a source of inspiration during the recording of Beethoven’s Piano Trios.