Extended Play – Three times Three
 Although resident in Quebec since 1993, Paris-born Patrice  Lare studied in Moscow for 8 years, and is steeped in the Russian piano school  tradition. His playing provides a massive foundation for the Complete  Rachmaninov Piano Trios (XXI-CD 2 1700) with his wife, cellist Velitchka Yotcheva (also Moscow-trained), and Canadian violinist Jean-Sebastien  Roy. Rachmaninov’s Trios Elegiaques are both early works in his Romantic,  post-Tchaikovsky mold. No.1 is a single-movement  trio in G minor from 1892, and No.2 a three-movement work in D minor,  written after the death of Tchaikovsky in late 1893 and dedicated “To  the Memory of a Great Artist”. This is big but always sensitive playing,  perfectly attuned to the style and nature of the music. Recorded at the  Radio-Canada studios in Montreal, the sound quality matches the tremendous performances.
Although resident in Quebec since 1993, Paris-born Patrice  Lare studied in Moscow for 8 years, and is steeped in the Russian piano school  tradition. His playing provides a massive foundation for the Complete  Rachmaninov Piano Trios (XXI-CD 2 1700) with his wife, cellist Velitchka Yotcheva (also Moscow-trained), and Canadian violinist Jean-Sebastien  Roy. Rachmaninov’s Trios Elegiaques are both early works in his Romantic,  post-Tchaikovsky mold. No.1 is a single-movement  trio in G minor from 1892, and No.2 a three-movement work in D minor,  written after the death of Tchaikovsky in late 1893 and dedicated “To  the Memory of a Great Artist”. This is big but always sensitive playing,  perfectly attuned to the style and nature of the music. Recorded at the  Radio-Canada studios in Montreal, the sound quality matches the tremendous performances.
 I’ve  sometimes wondered if the technical heights reached by Lang Lang are always matched by the depths of his interpretations, but  he certainly does his artistic reputation no harm with his first chamber  music CD, Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninov Piano Trios with Vadim Repin and Mischa  Maisky. Presumably this is his final major release from Deutsche Grammophon (477 8099),  following his $3 million signing with Sony; if so, it’s a fascinating  farewell, suggesting chamber music as a new field with huge potential  for him. The Rachmaninov trio is the G minor, and both here and in the  Tchaikovsky A minor trio Lang Lang really seems to avoid “showy” playing, getting to the heart of the music and clearly  sharing the interpretative view of his Russian colleagues. Again, the  standard of the recording matches that of the two outstanding performances.
I’ve  sometimes wondered if the technical heights reached by Lang Lang are always matched by the depths of his interpretations, but  he certainly does his artistic reputation no harm with his first chamber  music CD, Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninov Piano Trios with Vadim Repin and Mischa  Maisky. Presumably this is his final major release from Deutsche Grammophon (477 8099),  following his $3 million signing with Sony; if so, it’s a fascinating  farewell, suggesting chamber music as a new field with huge potential  for him. The Rachmaninov trio is the G minor, and both here and in the  Tchaikovsky A minor trio Lang Lang really seems to avoid “showy” playing, getting to the heart of the music and clearly  sharing the interpretative view of his Russian colleagues. Again, the  standard of the recording matches that of the two outstanding performances.
 At first sight, there  doesn’t seem to be any connection between the works on the latest CD  from faculty members at McGill University’s Schulich School of Music (XXI-CD  2 1699), but they are in fact closely  related. Jonathan Crow (violin), John Zirbel (horn) and Sara  Laimon (piano) open with a beautifully warm reading of the Brahms E  flat Horn Trio. This was the first work  written for this instrumental combination, and was inspired by the death of the composer’s mother.  Brahms chose to use not the newly-developed valve horn but the natural  waldhorn, with its sentimental ties to his family and his youth in Hamburg. It was, in turn, a request from  a Hamburg pianist for a  horn trio to be played along with the Brahms that led György Ligeti to write his own Horn Trio in 1982; moreover, Ligeti had also  lost his own mother earlier that year. Sub-titled “Hommage à Brahms”, it is a demanding, complex  and multi-layered work in the same four-movement form. Again, the  performance is exemplary. Brahms’ mentor Schumann wrote his Adagio & Allegro for horn and piano in 3 days in  February 1849; the first substantial solo work to fully explore the  potential of the new valve horn, it is still a demanding piece, and  Zirbel and Laimon are terrific. Recorded at the acoustically-excellent Schulich School,  the sound quality is outstanding.
At first sight, there  doesn’t seem to be any connection between the works on the latest CD  from faculty members at McGill University’s Schulich School of Music (XXI-CD  2 1699), but they are in fact closely  related. Jonathan Crow (violin), John Zirbel (horn) and Sara  Laimon (piano) open with a beautifully warm reading of the Brahms E  flat Horn Trio. This was the first work  written for this instrumental combination, and was inspired by the death of the composer’s mother.  Brahms chose to use not the newly-developed valve horn but the natural  waldhorn, with its sentimental ties to his family and his youth in Hamburg. It was, in turn, a request from  a Hamburg pianist for a  horn trio to be played along with the Brahms that led György Ligeti to write his own Horn Trio in 1982; moreover, Ligeti had also  lost his own mother earlier that year. Sub-titled “Hommage à Brahms”, it is a demanding, complex  and multi-layered work in the same four-movement form. Again, the  performance is exemplary. Brahms’ mentor Schumann wrote his Adagio & Allegro for horn and piano in 3 days in  February 1849; the first substantial solo work to fully explore the  potential of the new valve horn, it is still a demanding piece, and  Zirbel and Laimon are terrific. Recorded at the acoustically-excellent Schulich School,  the sound quality is outstanding.

 
						 Stravinsky - Pulcinella;  Symphony in Three Movements
Stravinsky - Pulcinella;  Symphony in Three Movements Tchaikovsky - Rococo  Variations; Prokofiev - Sinfonia Concertante
Tchaikovsky - Rococo  Variations; Prokofiev - Sinfonia Concertante Mahler - Symphony No.7
Mahler - Symphony No.7 Piano Music of Edward Grieg,  Volume 2
Piano Music of Edward Grieg,  Volume 2 Fauré - Works for Violin and  Piano
Fauré - Works for Violin and  Piano Phoenix
Phoenix 