Die Forelle Quintet
Chamber music with an ensemble from the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra.
When composer and pianist Amy Beach married at the age of 18, her husband decided she could only give one official concert per year. One of the occasions on which she played for an audience was the world premiere of her piano quintet from 1907. It is a late-Romantic piece with a touch of modernity, and is considered a milestone in American chamber music.
Camille Saint-Saëns composed his Septet around 1880, as commissioned by a musical society in Paris. It is a neoclassical piece for the unusual ensemble oftrumpet, two violins, viola, cello, double bass and piano. “I could compose a concerto for 25 guitars, but for trumpet – impossible!” Saint-Saëns is said to have stated, but to his surprise, the combination was successful and the piece became very popular.
Hear this piece performed by a septet of musicians from the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, before they conclude the concert with Schubert’s famous Die Forelle Quintet. He composed it at the age of 22 on behalf of an affluent amateur cellist who was particularly enchanted by one of Schubert’s songs, Die Forelle. For that reason, Schubert composed a number of variations of it for the highly recognisable fourth movement of the quintet.
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The music
Approximate times -
Amy Beach Piano Quintet27 min
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Camille Saint-Saëns Septet in E flat major18 min
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Intermission25 min
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Franz Schubert The Trout Quintet40 min
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Participants
- Won-Hee Lee violin
- Johannes Lörstad violin
- Nadine Jurdzinski viola
- Nicholas Shardlow viola
- Hanna Dahlkvist cello
- Sigrid Granit double bass
- Joakim Agnas trumpet
- Stefan Lindgren piano