This album is included in the following sets:
This set contains the following albums:
- Producer's Note
- Full Track Listing
- Cover Art
Fournier, Janigro & Badura-Skoda play Schubert
1951 Westminster LP recording remastered for finest sound quality
The trio of Fournier, Janigro and Badura-Skoda made a number of
excellent recordings for New York-based Westminster Recordings in the
1950s, which we're delighted to revisit here at Pristine Audio Direct,
thanks to the efforts of vinyl restoration wizard, Peter Harrison.
By
comparison to the Cortot-Thibaud-Casals recording of Schubert's first
Piano Trio (PASC021), here the work can, perhaps with the luxury of
vinyl side durations, breathe a little more easy. However, don't be
fooled by the difference in durations between the two - although this
recording does take each movement more slowly, it is largely thanks to a
major cut in the third movement that the earlier recording comes in
nearly five minutes shorter.
It is this more expansive side of
their playing that we've chosen to highlight here with the the slow, 2nd
movement available for free download. While there is little doubt of
the feeling in Casal's cello entry from the 1926 recording, here Janigro
appears to almost pour the notes from his cello, and that extra time
allocated to the movement allows him just a little more expressiveness.
(Note that the poor tape edit heard at approx. 3'43" is as originally issued.)
Andrew Rose
Fournier, Janigro and Badura-Skoda play Beethoven
Westminster classical LP recording remastered for finest sound quality
However, if the third, slow
movement had been taken here at the same pace as the earlier recording a
further minute could have been added to the duration here - clearly the
trio felt no need to use their extra time needlessly!
I've
chosen to highlight with our free download here the final movement,
where Fournier, Janigro and Badura-Skoda begin with a sense of real
jollity so clear that you can definitely hear them smiling at each other
as they play!
Once again I'm glad to report an excellent job of restoration by Peter Harrison, who seems to do the impossible and raise the bar every month on what can be achieved from these 1950's mono recordings. Take a listen and you'll hear a superb recording, wonderfully played, and not a hint that it's 54 years old.
Andrew Rose
Fournier, Janigro and Badura-Skoda play Mozart
The complete Piano Trios Pt. 1, remastered for finest sound quality
We continue our re-evaluation of recordings made by Jean Fournier, Antonio Janigro and Paul Badura-Skoda with their complete Mozart Piano Trios, of which this is the first of two volumes. The first of these, written in August 1776, was entitled a Divertimento by the composer and came some ten years before the Trio in B flat (K502). Its style is perhaps closer to a violin sonata, with the cello largely relegated to echoing the bass line of the piano.
That said, the violin hardly takes centre stage in the Divertimento either - indeed in all three works here we find excellent piano music supported by violin and underpinned by cello. Indeed these works rate amongst Mozart's finest compositions for the piano - the Trio in G (K564) was originally conceived as a piano sonata, with the string parts added some time later.
Thus we have some marvellous Mozart, which is perhaps nowhere near as well known as it deserves to be (a check in the recording catalogues shows not a single LP available in the UK of Mozart's trios in the late 1970s, for example), superb playing, and excellent recordings brought back to life thanks to the mercurial touch of vinyl maestro Peter Harrison. Take a listen to our sample, the opening movement of the Divertimento, and see if you can resist it!
Andrew Rose
Fournier, Janigro and Badura-Skoda play Mozart
The complete Piano Trios Pt. 2, remastered for finest sound quality
We continue our reevaluation of recordings made by Jean Fournier, Antonio Janigro and Paul Badura-Skoda with their complete Mozart Piano Trios, of which this is the second of two volumes.
The of the three works presented here, the Trio in G, K496, dates from 1786, the other two from 1788, the year in which Mozart wrote his three last symphonies. All three are in impeccable Mozartian taste, though it is only with the later two that we start to see him considering something a little more adventurous for the cellist than had previously been the case. Up until these works, the cello part generally offered simple support to the piano's lower notes, but in the middle movement of the Trio in E, K542, there is the suggestion of the kind of balance of forces between piano and strings which would later be more typical of Beethoven or Schubert.
Similarly it is the slow middle movement of the Trio in C, K549, which appears to foreshadow Schubert, a composer more usually associated with the lineage of Beethoven and Haydn. The final movement is purely Mozartian, a "tightly written" rondo (in the words of the original sleevenotes) and it is this which is offer when you click on the play button here.
Thus we have some marvellous Mozart, which is perhaps nowhere near as well known as it deserves to be (a check in the recording catalogues shows not a single LP available in the UK of Mozart's trios in the late 1970s, for example), superb playing, and excellent recordings brought back to life thanks to the mercurial touch of vinyl maestro Peter Harrison.
Andrew Rose
Fournier, Janigro and Badura-Skoda play Brahms
Westminster classical LP recording remastered for finest sound quality
With their reading of Brahms' wonderful Piano Trio in B, once again
Fournier, Janigro and Badura-Skoda show what a wonderful ensemble they
were. We already have a number of their 1950's Westminster recordings in
our catalogue, all wonderfully restored by Peter Harrison, and this is
most surely a worthy addition.
Brahms completed this Trio at the
age of just twenty-one, and poured into it all the exhuberance of youth.
Yet what we hear now is that exuberance married to the experience of a
long and highly successful life in music, as the work was substantially
revised - indeed "recomposed" - in 1889, some 35 years later.
This
tightening up stripped quite a substantial amount out of the original,
whilst managing to maintain the youthfulness of the original, and it is
the later version that is most often heard and recorded. Whether or not
this is a good thing was questionable even at the time - Brahms wrote to
his publisher "I must categorically state that the old one is bad, but I
do not maintain that the new one is good."
Well far be it from
me to question the great composer on this point, suffice to say that it
remains one of my favourite pieces of chamber music, and this fabulous
recorded version is well worth hearing.
Andrew Rose
Haydn's exquisite Piano Trios brilliantly executed
In superb fully XR-remastered sound quality for the first time
If anything, the earlier
Westminster pressing was superior to the HMV disc, though both were
pretty immaculate. The main difficulty faced here was simple
identification of the trios - Haydn wrote a good number, and as with
much of his output there is confusion both in terms of numbering, order
of composition, and possibly even how many he actually wrote.
The
numbering here is based on renowned Haydn scholar H. Robbins Landon's
ordering, which bears no relation to the numbering on the LPs (which did
not list the Hoboken numbers) - Westminster numbered these in the
following order::, No 1, No. 28, No. 30 and No. 17. Finally, the first
movement of Trio No. 23 is listed here as Allegro moderato, which is how
it appears on a recent issue by the Beaux Arts Trio. It is marked on
HMV's LP as Andante - yet the present tempo is noticeably swifter than
that of the Beaux Arts...
Andrew Rose
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SCHUBERT Piano Trio No 1 in B flat, D898
Recorded 15-30 October 1951
Released as Westminster WL5188 and XWN18481
Duration 35:17
Jean Fournier, violin
Paul Badura-Skoda, piano
Antonio Janigro, cello
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BEETHOVEN Piano Trio No 7 in B flat, Op. 97, "Archduke"
Recorded 15-30 October 1951, Konzerthaus, Mozart-Saal, Vienna
Released as Westminster WL5131 & XWN18270
Duration 40:03
Jean Fournier, violin
Paul Badura-Skoda, piano
Antonio Janigro, cello
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MOZART Divertimento in B flat major, K.254
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MOZART Piano Trio in G major, K.564
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MOZART Piano Trio in B flat major, K.502
Recorded c.1953, Konzerthaus, Mozart-Saal, ViennaReleased as Westminster LPs 52-84 & 52-42
Duration 61:23
Jean Fournier, violin
Paul Badura-Skoda, piano
Antonio Janigro, cello
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MOZART Piano Trio in E major, K.542
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MOZART Piano Trio in G major, K.496
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MOZART Piano Trio in C major, K.548
Recorded c.1953, Konzerthaus, Mozart-Saal, ViennaReleased as Westminster LPs 52-42, 52-67
Duration 65:18
Paul Badura-Skoda, piano
Antonio Janigro, cello
BRAHMS Piano Trio No. 1 in B, Op. 8
Jean Fournier, violin
Antonio Janigro, cello
Paul Badura-Skoda, piano
Recorded in 1953, issued as Westminster XWN 18450
Duration: 33'23"
HAYDN Piano Trio No. 39 in G major, HOB XV:25
HAYDN Piano Trio No. 18 in G major, HOB XV:5
HAYDN Piano Trio No. 28 in D major, HOB XV:16
HAYDN Piano Trio No. 23 in E flat major, HOB XV:10
Recorded in 1952
Transfers from Westminster XWN18610 9) and HMV XLP 20067
Transfers and XR remastering by Andrew Rose at Pristine Audio, May-July 2010
Cover artwork based on photographs of Fournier, Janigro and Badura-Skoda
Total duration: 53:56
Jean Fournier, violin
Paul Badura-Skoda, piano
Antonio Janigro, cello