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A Concert Review
By June S. April
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THE NEWTOWN BEE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2005
Outstanding French Trio Performance Was A Delight
The only regrettable aspect of Paris Piano Trio's November 13 concert
at Edmond Town Hall was that there were no compact discs available to
purchase at Edmond Town Hall.
The majority of their recordings are on the Harmonia Mundi label and may
be bought via the Internet. The recordings of this notable chamber music
trio are a must for any serious music lover's collection.
Violinist Regis Pasquier, cellist Roland Pidoux and pianist Jean-Claude
Pennetier have been friends since they were students at the Paris Conservatory.
Each has a highly acclaimed career as a soloist but their personal kinship
and love of sharing the beauty and wealth of chamber music has made their
union the larger commitment.
Thus, they are on the road a great deal of the time; currently touring
throughout the United States. Before coming to Newtown this month, they
conducted Master Classes in Alabama, Washington and New York; as well
as performing at universities and concert halls.
The richness of their tones might be compared to the sumptuous colors
in the paintings of Degas and Renoir. There is a glow in the timbre and
roundness of their harmonies that is not often heard. One does not merely
hear the music, rather the audience "inhales' it. Walking out one
was filled with a sense of euphoria.
Though the range of music Paris Piano Trio performs/records includes some
contemporary works, the profoundly lyrical trios of Haydn, Schubert, and
Schumann dominate.
The clarity and nuances that distinguish this trio were exquisitely executed
in the opening selection, Franz Josef Haydn's Trio in E-flat minor, Hob
XV, No.31.
The lush and passionate melodic strains in Robert Schumann's Trio in D
minor, Opus 63, has this reviewer eagerly anticipating their (promised)
future recording of this piece. It was brilliantly performed, deeply felt
by the musicians.
The afternoon concert closed with a remarkably memorable trio, which was
composed by Franz Schubert in the last of his all-too short life. At age
31 this gifted composer held such promise for so many more extraordinary
new ideas for future musical creations. Happily, the Paris Piano Trio
has made a CD of this work.
That Newtown Friends of Music, who sponsored the concert as part of its
2005-06 season, brings such outstanding artistry to this area is to be
applauded.
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