Busch Trio
Ravel composed his Piano Trio M67 just before enlisting voluntarily in the First World War. Inspired by the Basque country and its zortziko dance, the Trio ends with a sombre, almost anguished fourth movement. A mood inspired by the impending war? In his Piano Trio No.2, op.67, Shostakovich too is affected by the horrors of war and the death of a close friend. For the first time in the Russian composer’s output, we hear a Jewish theme, a danse macabre echoing the terrible events of the time. Another point in common between the two works is that both include a passacaglia. For the Busch Trio, it was self-evident that these two heart-rending works should be brought together on the same album.
The Busch Trio have been garnering glowing reviews in 19th-century repertoire. Now they show themselves equally at home in the two major 20th-century repertoire standards. All four movements of the Ravel reveal distinction of one kind or other.
57 Akadimias Street, Athens
Zip. 106 79
T. +30 210 3626137 - int.1
E. [email protected]