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Beethoven
Rarities (vol.5)
Rare
Piano Trios
Anhang 3 (World
Premiere Recording)
Hess 48, WoO 38, WoO 39, Op. 11
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| 1 |
Trio Anhang
3 (1. mov) |
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| 3 |
Allegretto
Hess 48 |
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| 4 |
Trio WoO 38
(1.mov) |
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| 7 |
Allegretto
WoO 39 |
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| 8 |
Trio Op. 11
(1. mov) |
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Frank
Bridge Trio
Roberto Mazzola,
violin
Giulio Glavina,
cello
Mariangela
Marcone,
piano |
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Oferta
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18,00 |
Disponibilidad:
Expedición
en 24 horas
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-----Meanwhile,
the Trio Anhang 3 in D major, which has been somewhat
overlooked, deserves separate mention. Attributed to Mozart
up until 1910 (Köchel, A. 52a), the Trio was subsequently reattributed
to Beethoven in 1926 by Wyzewa and Saint-Foix, together
with four other pieces: The Rondò Anh. 6, for piano (now acknowledged
as being authentic), and the Three Pieces for Pianoforte (piano duet)
Anh. 8 (which are certainly apocryphal). The precise attribution of the
Trio is still the subject of musicological research, since its authorship
is undecided between Ludwig and his brother,
Carl van Beethoven. Should the latter hypothesis be confirmed,
we would have a real revelation on our hands: Carl van Beethoven would
be identified as an excellent composer, capable of composing a work of
great expressive quality, not without a number of interesting analogies,
recognizable in the opening Allegro in the first Op. 1 Trio. The version
proposed here is the first complete one in the 33 missing bars (from bar
63 to 96 in the first movement) reconstructed by Albert Willem
Holsbergen, at the conclusion of a study carried out by the Beethoven
Research Centre, “Unheard Beethoven”. The world premiere
of this version, performed by the same musicians who feature in this recording,
took place at Moneglia, near Genoa, in August 2005
----Armando
Orlandi (from the note cover).
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