- Piano Trio No. 1 (Mendelssohn)
Felix Mendelssohn 's Piano Trio No. 1 in D minor, Op. 49 was completed on23 September 1839 and published the following year. The work is scored for a standardpiano trio consisting ofviolin ,cello andpiano . The trio is one of Mendelssohn's most popular chamber works and is recognised as one of his greatest along with his Octet, Op. 20.During the initial composition of the work, Mendelssohn took the advice of a fellow composer,
Ferdinand Hiller , and revised the piano part. The revised version was in a more romantic, Schumannesque style with the piano given a more important role in the trio. Indeed, the revised piece was reviewed by Schumann who declared Mendelssohn to be "the Mozart of the nineteenth century, the most illuminating of musicians."Movements
The trio has four movements:
# Molto allegro e agitato
# Andante con moto tranquillo
#Scherzo : Leggiero e vivace
#Finale : Allegro assai appassionatoA typical performance lasts just under 30 minutes.
Molto allegro e agitato
The first movement is in
sonata form and begins without an introduction with a "cantabile " main theme played by the cello, with the piano providing asyncopated accompaniment. The violin then joins the cello with a distorted version of the theme. Further variations of the main theme fill the transition to the second theme, also introduced by the cello, which is inA minor . Mendelssohn combines both themes in the development, which is predominately inD minor , the key on which also ends the movement. In the recapitulation, Mendelssohn adds a violincounter-melody to support the return of the original theme.Andante con moto tranquillo
The piano introduces the second movement, with the eight bar melody in the right hand and the accompaniment divided between the hands, as in a number of Mendelssohn's
Songs without Words . Below this, the bass line in the piano moves methodically, carefully balancing with the accompaniment and the melody. After the piano plays the main theme, the violin repeats it with acounterpoint played on the cello.Scherzo
The short and light
scherzo is internary form . As in the second movement, the main theme is first played on the piano, which then reduces itself to fragmentary accompaniment almost immediately. A rhythmicalmotif of the main theme is present throughout the movement, except in the more lyrical central section, whose theme resembles material from the first movement.Finale
After Hiller gave Mendelssohn his advice, the
finale was the most revised movement and unsurprisingly has a busy piano part. All types of keyboard writing occur in the movement, from closechord s to sweepingarpeggio s andchromatic octave s. The "cantabile" moments provide a refreshing contrast. The trio finishes with the shift to D major shortly before the end.External links
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