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A Trio of Trios
21-06-25
St Andrew's Alfriston BN26 5TL
19
:
30
until
21
:
30

In stock

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Event Details

Piano trios in the 18th century were often intended for amateur performance, but Haydn’s Piano Trio in C major, written in 1797, while Haydn was in London, is clearly aimed at professional players. It’s dedicated to the eminent pianist Therèse Jansen Bartolozzi, a student of Clementi, which no doubt accounts for its demanding piano part. The last movement, in a mixture of sonata and rondo form, was described by the great pianist and musicologist Charles Rosen as the most humorous in all of Haydn’s music.

Rebecca Clarke was a viola virtuoso and one of the most significant and influential female British composers of the 20th century. As a violist, she toured internationally, playing with many of the greatest musicians of the time and pioneering all-female chamber groups. As a composer, she received very little encouragement, and was a victim of persistent prejudice, which is perhaps why her output was relatively small. She wrote nothing in the last 35 years of her life, and died in New York in 1979, at the age of 93.

The Piano Trio is one of a handful of major chamber works, and was runner-up in a competition in 1921, submitted, on the advice of her publisher, under the male pseudonym ‘Anthony Trent’. Indeed, works by ‘Anthony Trent’ were generally received much more favourably by the critics than those by Rebecca Clarke, even when they appeared in the same programme! The trio is in three movements, linked by a motif which is heard at the opening and repeated in varied forms throughout the work.

The Piano Trio in B major by Brahms has been described as both his first and his last trio – written in 1853, at the age of 21 it was substantially revised 36 years later, making it, according to Brahms ‘not as dreary as before’. It is this revised version which will be performed by the Wealden Trio. This four movement work has everything – warmth and lyricism, muscularity, vitality and mystical beauty.

Three Sussex musicians come together to form The Wealden Trio, pianist William Hancox, violinist Jonathan Truscott and cellist Rachel Firmager.

Event Location
Event Directions
There is extremely limited parking (just a few spaces) along the edge of the green adjacent to the church. Please only use one of these spaces if you or your passengers have limited mobility. As you enter the village from the north there are two car parks, one on the left (The Willows) and one on the right (Sloe Lane). Do car share if you can, and please leave enough time to walk through the lovely village to the church.
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