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Mozart: The Complete Piano Trios
Mozart: The Complete Piano Trios
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Creators: Bernard Greenhouse, Jack Brymer, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Beaux Arts Trio, Menahem Pressler, Stephen Bishop Kovacevich, Patrick Ireland, Daniel Guilet
Label: Philips
Category: Music

List Price: $17.98
Buy New: $11.99
You Save: $5.99 (33%)
Buy New/Used from $10.50

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars(6 reviews)
Sales Rank: 41930

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 2
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 446154
UPC: 028944615425
EAN: 0028944615425
ASIN: B0000041BU

Release Date: April 11, 1995
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  Disc 1
  • Piano Trio In E, K.542: 1. Allegro
  • Piano Trio In E, K.542: 2. Andante grazioso
  • Piano Trio In E, K.542: 3. Allegro
  • Piano Trio In B Flat, K.502: 1. Allegro
  • Piano Trio In B Flat, K.502: 2. Larghetto
  • Piano Trio In B Flat, K.502: 3. Allegetto
  • Piano Trio In G, K.564: 1. Allegro
  • Piano Trio In G, K.564: 2. Andante. Thema mit Variationen
  • Piano Trio In G, K.564: 3. Allegretto
  • Piano Trio In C, K.548: 1. Allegro
  • Piano Trio In C, K.548: 2. Andante cantabile
  • Piano Trio In C, K.548: 3. Allegro

  Disc 2
  • Piano Trio In B Flat, K.254: 1. Allegro assai
  • Piano Trio In B Flat, K.254: 2. Adagio
  • Piano Trio In B Flat, K.254: 3. Rondeau. Tempo di menuetto
  • Piano Trio In G, K.496: 1. Allegro
  • Piano Trio In G, K.496: 2. Andante
  • Piano Trio In G, K.496: 3. Allegretto. Thema mit Variationen
  • Trio In E flat, K.498: 1. Andante
  • Trio In E flat, K.498: 2. Menuetto
  • Trio In E flat, K.498: 3. Rondeaux. Allegretto

Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Fine Mozart at a Bargain Price   April 6, 2007
  3 out of 3 found this review helpful

I can't add much to Mike Powers excellent review, but a few thoughts. This is another in the Philips Duo series, which I find a good source for the chamber music of Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert etc at bargain prices. The way these composers are played remains pretty much unchanged since these recordings were made in the late 60s and the 1970s, and made by the finest players of the time. When you thought piano trios you thought the Beau Arts Trio, who made the piano trio their speciality. So you can be sure that the interpretation will be excellent, which it is, and, despite the age of the recording, the sound is very good. And the music ? Some who take life too seriously might put them down as " more Mozart lollipops", well, they don't pretend to compare with a Brandenburg, but they are joyfull and airy, more like a small scale piano concerto, plenty of fine melodies for all the players.
I have no hesitation in giving five stars, there might be a better version available, but it will cost at least twice as much.



5 out of 5 stars Mozart with a heart   May 20, 2006
  3 out of 3 found this review helpful

The last two star review is frankly flabbergasting. I guess some people may be just a little hard to please and perhaps if you are a musical expert or virtuoso you may have a case against these performances by the uniformly excellent Beaux Arts Trio.

Look at what everyone else thinks! This is exceptionially beautiful music played with heart and soul. There are so many performances of Mozart's chamber music that to these untrained ears just sound dull, thin-lipped and polite - for a long time I found much of Mozart's music rather superficial - very clever and witty - but ultimately superficial - I could fully understand why Glenn Gould recorded his sonatas just to show how overrated he had become!

Listening to the Beaux Arts Trio, all is forgiven. I can hear all instruments perfectly equally; the pacing is spot on and somehow the performance brings out a profundity in Mozart's chamber music I was unable to hear before.

Having said all this I would of course love to hear the other Phillips recording that is meant to be so definitive.





2 out of 5 stars Unbalanced, sloppy and poor intonation at a good price   February 22, 2006
  18 out of 28 found this review helpful

I take my chamber music very seriously, and thought this would be a good deal at $14 from Amazon. I'm severely disappointed, but concede you get what you pay for. Both the remastering and the playing leaves something to be desired. I have these same three players playing the Dumky Trio and the Mendelssohn d minor Trio, and the Schubert Trios and they're quite good. These are bad enough that I would not even consider backing the CDs up.

First, the balance seems to be biased towards the violin / clarinet. Daniel Guilet is often criticized for milking the music too much, and it is no exception here, and this, imho, is a severe flaw when interpreting Mozart. His style is also inconsistent. For example, his Mozart spiccato at pianissimos becomes sloppy detaches that are way too long at fortes. Menahem Pressler sounds like he's playing with the soft pedal and the lid down. At times Mozart's clever left hand counterpoint is lost in the background. In the Clarinet Trio, the viola is often lost behind the clarinet. Overall, the intonation is not very good, especially in the awkward passages, like in the E major Trio. (Both Guilet and Greenhouse have issues tuning against the piano... perhaps because the lid was down?)

I give two stars because it could be even worse. My expectations compare to the excellent (especially in comparison) interpretation by Ingred Haebler of the Mozart Piano Quartets (released by Philips). There the exacting intonation and precociousness of Mozart shines. With these recordings I feel like I'm listening to a sight-reading through the wall, closest to the violinist/clarinet player.



5 out of 5 stars Elegance   June 23, 2005
  21 out of 23 found this review helpful

These performances are wonderful, pure, relaxed and elegant. Mozart's Piano Trios are mostly mature works, still more easy listening and less expressive, less demanding than his "Haydn" quartets, most essential string quintets (K. 515, 516, 593), the piano/wind quintet (K 452), the piano quartet (K. 478) and the trio labelled "Divertimento" (K. 563). This makes it more difficult to explain what their charm consists in. Let me try with words like playful coolness, charming equanimity, happy serenity, light imperturbability, natural elegance, soothing purity or unruffled whiteness... Elegance is the keyword.


5 out of 5 stars BEAUX ARTS' MOZART MAKES THIS KITTY PURR!!! (SNOOKIE)   May 6, 2003
  17 out of 19 found this review helpful

I have had this recording for about five years, and have enjoyed it immensley. Recorded in the 1960's, it features the original personnel (Menahem Pressler, Piano - Daniel Guilet, Violin - Bernard Greenhouse, Cello).

The Beaux Arts Trio is just wonderful in this literature. Menahem Pressler's dynamic shading, articulation, and interactions with the other instruments are always "just right".

The sound of the recording itself is fine. Even though it was recorded in 1967, it was digitally remastered to cd.

I highly recommend this set. The Beaux Arts has been around for over 40 years. As a result, they have a lot of experience playing with each other, and it shows in this masterful compilation.


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